职前教师在多元化英语课堂中引导讨论的首次尝试:多视角关注

IF 1.3 4区 教育学 Q2 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH
Leslie C. Banes, Julia G. Houk, Steven Z. Athanases, Sergio L. Sanchez
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引用次数: 1

摘要

背景:以意义制造为特征的课堂话语支持学生实现学科特定学习。然而,超越背诵需要发展信念、技能、结构和实践。我们所做的任何关于发展讨论实践的理论都必须关注文化和语言多样性课堂的现实。目的:我们的研究提供了一种教师教育创新,为ELA考生提供了促进讨论的准备,并由一组注意镜头构成:注意协作交流、内容学习和公平。我们问:当他们反思他们第一次尝试在不同的中学ELA课堂上促进讨论时,职前教师(PSTs)注意到了他们的讨论实践以及学生的参与度和反应模式是什么?参与者:我们的研究以教师证书项目中的探究课程为特色。参与者是83名攻读中学英语证书的PST,学生在不同的课堂上教学。五分之三的人是白人,39%的人是有色人种。设计:我们构建了一个多页论文的数据库,其中PST对录像讨论选拔赛进行了反思。我们根据研究文献和数据综述中的新兴主题开发了一个编码方案,以捕捉PST注意到的内容。我们使用和改编了一个多视角的注意框架,从概念上组织了主题。此外,我们构建了小插曲,以探索两名心理测试人员如何注意到不同学习者之间的讨论参与。结果:我们在数据中发现了所有三种注意镜片的证据。在这三个镜头中,协作交流最为密集。PST专注于“让学生说话”。PST还反思了共同构建意义和跟踪思想流动的尝试。四分之三的人记录了对跨内容识字发展的注意。较少的PST表现出对文学作品的合作解读,这是ELA特定讨论的一个重要方面。尽管PST开始利用文化和语言知识,但许多人还没有对种族主义和其他形式的偏见做出回应或进行教育。为了展示实践中的多视角注意,我们呈现了两个小插曲,讲述了心理战教师如何解读课堂讨论中的重要时刻。结论:我们的研究为理解PST在领导讨论的早期阶段注意到的内容提供了一个起点,并强调了尽早启动这一过程所需的内容。调查结果强调,需要建立真实、切实的讨论主导实践,并更加关注ELA学科目标和公平。我们的研究强调了一个框架,它是一种分析和教学工具,可以帮助PST组织和反思新兴的讨论实践。框架和研究结果可以作为致力于促进公平讨论学习的教师教育工作者的启发。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Multi-Lens Noticing in Preservice Teachers’ First Attempts at Facilitating Discussion in Diverse English Classes
Background: Classroom discourse featuring meaning making supports students achieving discipline-specific learning. However, moving beyond recitation requires developing beliefs, skills, structures, and practices. Any theorizing we do about developing discussion practice must attend to realities of culturally and linguistically diverse classrooms. Purpose: Our study offers a teacher education innovation that prepares ELA candidates to facilitate discussion, framed by a set of noticing lenses: noticing for collaborative communication, content learning, and equity. We asked: As they reflected on their first attempts at facilitating discussion in diverse secondary ELA classes, what did preservice teachers (PSTs) notice about their discussion practices and students’ engagement and response patterns? Participants: Our study features an inquiry course in a teacher credential program. Participants were 83 PSTs pursuing secondary English credentials, student teaching in diverse classrooms. Three-fifths identified as White, with 39% identifying as PSTs of color. Design: We constructed a database of multipage essays in which PSTs reflected on videotaped discussion tryouts. We developed a coding scheme from research literature and emerging themes from data review to capture what PSTs noticed. We organized themes conceptually using and adapting a multi-lens noticing framework. Additionally, we constructed vignettes to explore ways two PSTs were noticing discussion engagements among their diverse learners. Results: We found evidence of all three noticing lenses in the data. Of the three lenses, collaborative communication was densest. PSTs were preoccupied with “getting students talking.” PSTs also reflected on attempts at co-constructing meaning and tracking flow of ideas. Three-fourths documented noticing of cross-content literacy development. Fewer PSTs demonstrated attending to collaborative interpretation of literary works, an important aspect of ELA-specific discussion. Although PSTs were beginning to leverage cultural and linguistic knowledge, many were not yet responding to or educating about racism and other forms of bias. To demonstrate multi-lens noticing in practice, we present two vignettes of how PSTs interpreted salient moments in classroom discussion. Conclusions: Our research provides a launching for understanding what PSTs notice in early stages of leading discussion and highlights what is needed to jump-start this process early. Findings underscore the need to build authentic and tangible discussion-leading practice, with deeper attention to ELA disciplinary goals and equity. Our study highlights a framework as an analytical and pedagogical tool to help PSTs organize and reflect on emerging discussion practices. Framework and findings may serve as a heuristic for teacher educators committed to fostering learning about equitable discussion.
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来源期刊
Teachers College Record
Teachers College Record EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH-
CiteScore
3.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
89
期刊介绍: Teachers College Record (TCR) publishes the very best scholarship in all areas of the field of education. Major articles include research, analysis, and commentary covering the full range of contemporary issues in education, education policy, and the history of education. The book section contains essay reviews of new books in a specific area as well as reviews of individual books. TCR takes a deliberately expansive view of education to keep readers informed of the study of education worldwide, both inside and outside of the classroom and across the lifespan.
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