Teach as I Say, Not as I Do: How Preservice Teachers Made Sense of the Mismatch between How They Were Expected to Teach and How They Were Taught in Their Professional Training Program

Christopher P. Brown, David P. Barry, D. Ku, K. Puckett
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引用次数: 8

Abstract

Abstract A challenge for teacher educators is providing preservice teachers with the opportunity to develop the confidence and efficacy required to address their future students’ sociocultural, academic, and social-emotional needs in this era of standardization, accountability, and limited resources. This case study investigated this issue by examining how a sample of preservice teachers made sense of how their coursework supported them in becoming teachers who center their practices on the needs and interests of their current and future students while attending to policymakers’ reforms. By analyzing the findings of this study, it becomes apparent that these preservice teachers questioned whether the coursework in their program supported their development in becoming classroom teachers in a manner that reflected how their instructors expected them to teach their students. Interpreting these findings provides insight into how teacher educators and their programs can better support preservice teachers’ confidence and efficacy as they enter their future classrooms.
照我说的去教,而不是照我做的去教:职前教师如何理解他们期望的教学方式与他们在专业培训项目中被教导的方式之间的不匹配
教师教育工作者面临的一个挑战是,在这个标准化、问责制和资源有限的时代,为职前教师提供培养自信和效能所需的机会,以满足未来学生的社会文化、学术和社会情感需求。本案例研究调查了这一问题,考察了一组职前教师如何理解他们的课程如何支持他们成为一名教师,他们的实践以当前和未来学生的需求和兴趣为中心,同时关注政策制定者的改革。通过分析这项研究的发现,很明显,这些职前教师质疑他们项目中的课程是否能以一种反映教师期望他们如何教学生的方式支持他们成为课堂教师的发展。通过对这些发现的解读,我们可以深入了解教师教育者及其项目如何更好地支持职前教师在进入未来课堂时的信心和效能。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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