Increasing In-Service Teachers’ Willingness to be Videoed to Support Professional Learning

IF 0.9 Q3 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH
Marie-Christina Edwards
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

. Increasing and compelling research demonstrates the affordances of personal video footage as an informative and transformational tool in teacher professional learning (PL), yet many in-service teachers avoid engaging in this practice. This Australian Research Council funded study tracked teacher willingness to use video to capture the application of PL over 12 months in a rural Australian primary school. Data from questionnaires, video-based learning conversations, and collaborative sharing sessions demonstrated a strong increasing trend in the number of teachers volunteering to be videoed across three iterations of research. Thematic analysis highlighted five key factors as catalysts for increased teacher participation in engaging with video as a professional learning (PL) tool. These factors include – safe relationships and the building of relational trust; personalized connection of PL to classroom practice; an effective video annotation repository system; teacher agency within an iterative structure; and time – the need for external support systems. This study found that when these factors were addressed, willingness to engage in using the power of video as a tool to support teacher PL increased.
提高在职教师接受录像以支持专业学习的意愿
. 越来越多的令人信服的研究表明,个人视频片段作为教师专业学习(PL)的信息和转型工具的优势,然而许多在职教师避免参与这种实践。这项由澳大利亚研究委员会资助的研究跟踪了澳大利亚一所农村小学教师在12个月内使用视频来捕捉PL应用的意愿。来自问卷调查、基于视频的学习对话和协作分享会议的数据表明,在三次研究迭代中,自愿接受视频拍摄的教师人数呈强劲增长趋势。专题分析强调了促进教师更多地参与将视频作为专业学习工具的五个关键因素。这些因素包括-安全关系和关系信任的建立;语文教学与课堂实践的个性化衔接一个有效的视频注释库系统迭代结构中的教师代理;还有时间——外部支持系统的需求。本研究发现,当这些因素得到解决时,使用视频作为支持教师学习的工具的意愿增加了。
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来源期刊
Australian Journal of Teacher Education
Australian Journal of Teacher Education EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH-
CiteScore
1.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
22
期刊介绍: The purpose of the Australian Journal of Teacher Education is to enhance the quality of teacher education through the publication of research reports, learned points of view and commentaries. Contributions may address proposals for, or descriptions of, development in the purpose, structure and methodology of teacher education; curriculum issues; changes in schools; or general social, ideological or political issues relating to teacher education. Papers must make an explicit connection with teacher education. The Australian Journal of Teacher Education, which is blind peer reviewed by a minimum of two members of the Editorial panel, is access free, electronic and published by Edith Cowan University. The Journal is indexed by the Australian Education Index and ERIC. It was rated ‘A’ by Australian Research Council in 2010 (www.arc.gov.au/era/era_journal_list/htm ) and is ranked .496 on SCImago. It is pleased to offer authors an efficient publication service. Manuscripts that have been through the review and revision cycle and have been accepted for publication will typically be published within two months. The time to first review can take up to six months, due to the large number of papers being submitted for review. Intending authors should be aware that the Journal has a rejection rate in excess of 50%.
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