Anna Jennerjohn, Debra S. Peterson, Catherine Cavanaugh
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Areas of promise for future integration are discussed.KEYWORDS: Pre-service elementary teacherscontent area literacyinterdisciplinarytechnology Disclosure StatementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).Additional informationNotes on contributorsAnna JennerjohnDr. Anna Jennerjohn is a Researcher at Rockman et al. Cooperative. She conducts research and evaluation at the intersections of science and literacy pedagogies, literacy development for emergent multilinguals, teacher education, and teacher workforce development. She earned her PhD in Literacy Education - Curriculum and Instruction from the University of Minnesota.Debra S. PetersonDr. Debra S. Peterson has served as a teacher, researcher, and consultant with the Minnesota Center for Reading Research at the University of Minnesota for 22 years. She was a veteran elementary teacher, received the International Literacy Association Albert J. Harris award for outstanding reading research, and published multiple peer reviewed articles. She also was a co-author of the book No More Reading Instruction without Differentiation.Catherine CavanaughDr. Catherine Cavanaugh is a lecturer at the University of Minnesota. She teaches literacy courses in the Elementary Education Initial Licensure Program and is passionate about critical issues related to literacy learning and teaching. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
尽管有证据表明跨学科教学法对小学生有益,但职前教师经常学习孤立的教学方法。为了解决这一差异,六位教师教育家发起了为期两年的自学,以改善他们的实践。他们共同创建了一个共享模块来整合技术、文化和科学内容。自学旨在回答研究问题:在小学教师教育计划中实施跨学科模块的成功和挑战是什么?调查结果涉及三个主要类别:教师教育教学法、技术工具的使用和跨学科合作。讨论了未来集成的承诺领域。关键词:职前小学教师内容领域素养跨学科技术披露声明作者未报告潜在利益冲突。其他信息:贡献者说明anna jennerjohn博士Anna Jennerjohn是Rockman等公司的研究员。合作。她在科学和扫盲教学法的交叉点、新兴多语言的扫盲发展、教师教育和教师队伍发展方面进行研究和评估。她在明尼苏达大学获得扫盲教育课程与教学博士学位。黛布拉·s·彼得森博士Debra S. Peterson在明尼苏达大学明尼苏达阅读研究中心担任教师、研究员和顾问已有22年。她是一名经验丰富的小学教师,因杰出的阅读研究获得了国际扫盲协会阿尔伯特·j·哈里斯奖,并发表了多篇同行评议的文章。她也是《没有区别的阅读指导》一书的合著者。凯瑟琳CavanaughDr。Catherine Cavanaugh是明尼苏达大学的讲师。她在小学教育初级执照计划中教授扫盲课程,并对与扫盲学习和教学相关的关键问题充满热情。她曾在小学教室任教,协调全州扫盲项目,并担任明尼苏达州阅读协会主席。
Nearby Nature: An Interdisciplinary Science, Literacy, and Technology Project Situated within a Traditional Teacher Preparation Program
ABSTRACTPre-service teachers often learn to teach in siloed methods courses despite evidence that interdisciplinary pedagogies benefit elementary school students. To address this discrepancy, six teacher educators initiated a two-year self-study to improve their practice. They co-created a shared module to integrate technology, literacy, and science content. The self-study was designed to answer the research question: what are the successes and challenges of implementing an interdisciplinary module within an elementary teacher education program? Findings relate to three main categories: teacher education pedagogies, use of technology tools, and interdisciplinary collaboration. Areas of promise for future integration are discussed.KEYWORDS: Pre-service elementary teacherscontent area literacyinterdisciplinarytechnology Disclosure StatementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).Additional informationNotes on contributorsAnna JennerjohnDr. Anna Jennerjohn is a Researcher at Rockman et al. Cooperative. She conducts research and evaluation at the intersections of science and literacy pedagogies, literacy development for emergent multilinguals, teacher education, and teacher workforce development. She earned her PhD in Literacy Education - Curriculum and Instruction from the University of Minnesota.Debra S. PetersonDr. Debra S. Peterson has served as a teacher, researcher, and consultant with the Minnesota Center for Reading Research at the University of Minnesota for 22 years. She was a veteran elementary teacher, received the International Literacy Association Albert J. Harris award for outstanding reading research, and published multiple peer reviewed articles. She also was a co-author of the book No More Reading Instruction without Differentiation.Catherine CavanaughDr. Catherine Cavanaugh is a lecturer at the University of Minnesota. She teaches literacy courses in the Elementary Education Initial Licensure Program and is passionate about critical issues related to literacy learning and teaching. She has taught in elementary classrooms, coordinated statewide literacy projects, and served as President of the Minnesota Reading Association.