Self-Belief and Confidence to Teach Arts and Digital Technology in K-6 Classrooms

Author(s):  
Narelle Lemon ◽  
Susanne Garvis

Teacher self-efficacy is an important motivational construct that informs actions associated with teaching. Teacher self-efficacy develops during teacher education. Highly effective teacher education is able to support and enhance self-efficacy. Variation however can occur for a number of reasons. In the case of digital technology and the arts, teacher self-efficacy informs perceived levels of competence in teaching students. This chapter reports on the current levels of teacher self-efficacy of pre-service teachers at three Australian universities. Dance, drama, music, media, visual arts and digital technology were explored. Findings highlight that the different cohorts had different levels of perceived competence. Such findings are important for teacher education and also the professional development of teachers for arts and digital technology education.

Author(s):  
Narelle Lemon ◽  
Susanne Garvis

Teacher self-efficacy is an important motivational construct that informs actions associated with teaching. Teacher self-efficacy develops during teacher education. Highly effective teacher education is able to support and enhance self-efficacy. Variation however can occur for a number of reasons. In the case of digital technology and the arts, teacher self-efficacy informs perceived levels of competence in teaching students. This chapter reports on the current levels of teacher self-efficacy of pre-service teachers at three Australian universities. Dance, drama, music, media, visual arts and digital technology were explored. Findings highlight that the different cohorts had different levels of perceived competence. Such findings are important for teacher education and also the professional development of teachers for arts and digital technology education.


2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 15-35
Author(s):  
Chancey Bosch ◽  
Trevor Ellis

Technology-enhanced learning continues to provide opportunities for increased interventions in educational programing. For teacher education programs, novelty pales in comparison to providing meaningful instruction and enduring outcomes. The use of avatars has provided integration of research evidence that increases intended behaviors; however, research is lacking on teacher self-efficacy change via an avatar experience. The purpose of this study is to examine the relationship between teacher self-efficacy and avatar use in a teacher education program. A relational study using both parametric and non-parametric designs for four different samples indicated a significant relationship between avatar intervention and teacher self-efficacy in classroom management, instructional strategies, and student engagement. The sample from a student teaching course, which had a limited number of participants, provided mixed results. More studies need to include experimental designs and isolation of variabilities in the avatar model.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Krupke ◽  
Jeffrey A. Knox

<p><b>Purpose:</b> The purpose of this project was to study the changes in general and specific teacher self-efficacy related to the frequency of Professional Development (PD) video conference follow-up, teacher assignment, and teacher career stage. </p><p><b>Method:</b> This study was approved by the St. Ambrose University IRB in May, 2016. PD meetings were held at four elementary schools in four midwestern school districts. Each PD meeting had been requested by the early elementary staff. The topic of these meetings was training in the use of See the Sound/Visual Phonics (STS/VP), a gestural technique that represents all the sounds in English, as a supplement to literacy instruction. Seventy-four elementary educators attended these meetings. Attendees were assigned to preschool, kindergarten, first grade, and second grade classrooms. Attendees also included reading teachers, special education teachers, and speech-language pathologists. Attendees were grouped according to these assignment categories, as well as by career stage categories according to Huberman (1989)<br></p><p>All attendees participated in a video conference follow-up to the PD meeting. The topic of the PD meeting was the use of See the Sound/Visual Phonics (STS/VP) as a supplement to typical literacy instruction. They were given the option of participating in two individual video conference follow-up meetings, or one grade or assignment-level group meetings. Both types of follow-up conferences lasted for a total of 35-37 minutes. Sixteen attendees chose individual video conference follow-up, while the other fifty-eight participated in group video conference follow-up.<br></p><p>All video conference follow-up was conducted in the time period between the end of the PD meeting and eight weeks after that meeting (PD+8). The two individual conference follow-up meetings were arranged depending on the attendee schedule. These were held at PD+2 weeks and PD+6 weeks. The group, assignment-specific, video follow-up was held at PD+4 weeks. These involved one meeting for each grade level. A Post-Conference Response Survey was filled out by both the attendee involved and the follow-up provider. Agreement between the two people was measured on a random sample of surveys. Agreement was defined for the purposes of this study using the criteria of (+/-) one scale point. Agreement was calculated at 67%.<br></p><p>All attendees completed a survey concerning self-efficacy in the three areas mentioned above. A copy of the survey is in Appendix B. All results were compiled according to teaching assignment and career state. The survey was administered twice. Survey 1 was conducted at PD+8 weeks, and Survey 2 at PD+16 weeks. There were no scheduled follow-ups between PD+8 weeks and PD+16 weeks. Attendees were given the option of allowing the results of their two surveys for research purposes. This followed guidelines of the St. Ambrose IRB. The attendees were assured that the data would be grouped, and individual attendees would remain anonymous.<br></p><p><b>Results:</b> Frequency of Video-Conference Follow-up: Attendees who chose the two-individual-conference option had higher efficacy ratings across all three categories than did those who chose the group conference option. This held for both Survey 1 and Survey 2. It is possible that the differences in the number of subjects in the two follow-up categories may have affected the results.<br></p><p><b>Teacher Assignment: </b> Teachers were asked to indicate their current assignment on the initial survey. There were some differences in both general and specific teacher self-efficacy related to classroom assignment. For two groups, the preschool teachers and first grade teachers, the changes ( Survey 2 compared to Survey 1) were greatest related to the specific self-efficacy measure of efficacy for STS/VP use. Overall assignment was slightly correlated with both specific teacher self-efficacy and support efficacy.<br></p><p><b>Teacher Career Stage:</b> The Huberman’s (1989) career stage categorization was used as a measure of career stage. Attendees at about mid-career (the “Experimentation” category according to Huberman) showed the greatest change in specific self-efficacy related to STS/VP use. There was a positive correlation between both specific teacher self-efficacy and support efficacy.<br></p>


Author(s):  
Gara Latchanna ◽  
Mittireddy Venkataramana ◽  
Abebe Garedew

The paper attempts to provide a snapshot of the current practices in the Professional Development of Teachers (PDoT) in four selected countries namely, Ethiopia, Finland, India and Singapore. PDoT has been analysed in the form of a continuum of Initial Teacher Education (ITE), Induction and Continuous Professional Development (CPD). The survey of literature revealed that for ITE in two countries, i.e. Ethiopia and India, the system was unable to attract competent applicants, as a result ofwhich the professional competence of teachers suffered. On the other hand, Finland and Singapore were the epitomes of having effective ITE system. The ability to attract candidates with high potential into ITE, right amount of emphasis on theory and practice in ITE programmes, the existence of effective CPD and rigorous professional development community involving the ministry of education, universities of teacher education and schools, and high prestige for the teaching profession enabled Finland and Singapore to be the star performers in PDoT. In Finland, the provision of one-year CPD training on special needs education to all teachers and professional autonomy to teachers were the salient features whereas in Singapore, a monthly stipend for student teachers during initial teacher education and multifarious career tracks for the teacher were a few additional features. 'This survey of literature has presented significant lessons drawn from eachrespective country regardingpractices in PDoT.


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