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Using video to promote pre-service teachers’ thinking about their transition to teaching

Version 2 2024-06-17, 12:28
Version 1 2015-03-10, 00:00
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posted on 2024-06-17, 12:28 authored by MA Ludecke
This paper reports on research investigating the use of video representations of first-year teachers’ experiences in undergraduate teacher education workshops that focus on the transition to teaching. The use of the video is a responsive act that draws on the notion of looking back, where graduates in their first year of teaching ‘speak to’ current students. Scenes from video footage of the theatre-based research performance The First Time shaped workshop activities and discussions in the unit. Themes ranged from pedagogical to practical, covering topics such as teacher identity discourses; epiphanic and revelatory moments of transition to becoming a teacher; and preparing for job applications and interviews. Data from the researcher’s journal, Student Evaluation of Teaching and Units (SETU) comments, and semi-structured interviews with undergraduate students upon completion of the workshops are framed within a phenomenographic paradigm. The aim in phenomenography is to describe variations of conception that people have of a particular phenomenon (Sin, 2010), in this case the video as a tool to promote critical thinking about the transition to teaching. The researcher explored her own, and participants’ experiences, and identified a range of conceptual meanings of the phenomenon. These were classified into categories according to their similarities and differences concerning the effectiveness of this specific video in assisting undergraduates in their transition to teaching. Early results reveal some similarities and many variations among participants as to the effectiveness of the video as a tool. Their conceptions of the phenomenon are individual and relational, and as such are quite varied. Emergent varied themes include: ‘I know what it is that I need to learn’; ‘Is this theory or practice?’; and ‘I don’t do drama’. Emergent similarities include: ‘Preparing for the unexpected’.

History

Location

Sydney, New South Wales

Language

eng

Publication classification

E Conference publication, E1 Full written paper - refereed

Copyright notice

2015, Australian Teacher Education Association

Extent

Conference paper

Editor/Contributor(s)

[Unknown]

Pagination

173 - 185

Start date

2014-07-06

End date

2014-07-09

Event

Australian Teacher Education Association. Conference (2014 : Sydney, New South Wales)

Publisher

Australian Teacher Education Association

Place of publication

[Sydney, N.S.W.]

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