Catalogue Search | MBRL
Search Results Heading
Explore the vast range of titles available.
MBRLSearchResults
-
DisciplineDiscipline
-
Is Peer ReviewedIs Peer Reviewed
-
Item TypeItem Type
-
SubjectSubject
-
YearFrom:-To:
-
More FiltersMore FiltersSourceLanguage
Done
Filters
Reset
827
result(s) for
"Lehrerausbildung"
Sort by:
Perceived ICT-related learning opportunities during teacher education and pre-service teachers' perceptions of outcomes of the use of ICT for teaching and learning and their uncertainty tolerance regarding the in-classroom use of ICT
by
Reintjes, Christian
,
Nonte, Sonja
,
Hülshoff, Andreas
in
Clusteranalyse
,
Digitale Medien
,
Digitalisierung
2025
We examined perceptions of ICT-related learning opportunities during teacher education, perceived outcomes of the use of ICT for teaching and learning and uncertainty tolerance regarding the in-classroom use of ICT in a sample of 131 pre-service teachers. Results from two-step cluster analyses identified two groups based on participants’ perceptions of ICT-related learning opportunities: Participants in cluster 1 overall reported higher values for most indicators than participants in cluster 2. Participants’ perceptions of outcomes of the use of ICT for teaching and learning and their domain-specific uncertainty tolerance did not vary significantly between clusters. In the total sample, there was a significant positive correlation between participants’ perceptions of positive outcomes of the use of ICT for teaching and learning and their uncertainty tolerance and significant negative associations between perceived negative outcomes of the use of ICT for teaching and learning and perceived positive outcomes and their uncertainty tolerance. Significant and similarly directed associations were found in cluster 1 but not in cluster 2. Correlations between perceived positive and negative outcomes of the use of ICT for teaching and learning and between perceived negative outcomes of the use of ICT for teaching and learning and participants’ uncertainty tolerance differed significantly between clusters. (DIPF/Orig.)
In dieser Studie wurden Einschätzungen angehender Lehrkräfte zu digitalisierungsbezogenen Lerngelegenheiten während der Lehramtsausbildung sowie zu Folgen eines digital gestützten Unterrichts und ihrer Ungewissheitstoleranz in Bezug auf die unterrichtliche Nutzung digitaler Medien in einer Stichprobe von 131 Lehramtsstudierenden untersucht. Ergebnisse von two-step Clusteranalysen deuten auf zwei Gruppen basierend auf der Wahrnehmung digitalisierungsbezogener Lerngelegenheiten hin: Teilnehmende in Cluster 1 berichteten insgesamt für die Mehrheit an Indikatoren stärker ausgeprägte Werte als Teilnehmende in Cluster 2. Einschätzungen zu Folgen des unterrichtlichen Einsatzes digitaler Medien und der bereichsspezifischen Ungewissheitstoleranz variierten nicht signifikant zwischen den Clustern. In der Gesamtstichprobe gab es eine positive Korrelation zwischen Einschätzungen zu positiven Folgen des unterrichtlichen Einsatzes digitaler Medien und der Ungewissheitstoleranz der Teilnehmenden und signifikante negative Korrelationen zwischen Einschätzungen zu negativen Folgen des unterrichtlichen Einsatzes digitaler Medien und eingeschätzten positiven Folgen sowie der Ungewissheitstoleranz der Teilnehmenden. Entsprechend gerichtete signifikante Korrelationen ließen sich in Cluster 1, nicht jedoch in Cluster 2 identifizieren. Korrelationen zwischen eingeschätzten positiven und negativen Folgen des unterrichtlichen Einsatzes digitaler Medien und zwischen Einschätzungen zu negativen Folgen des unterrichtlichen Einsatzes digitaler Medien und der Ungewissheitstoleranz in Bezug auf die unterrichtliche Nutzung digitaler Medien variierten signifikant zwischen den Clustern. (DIPF/Orig.)
Journal Article
I do, we do, you do home economics: explicit instruction connecting content with ideology
2021
Explicit instruction is a teaching model that demonstrates to students what to do and how to do it. One purpose of ideology is to focus the who, what, when, where, and why of a disciplinary field. Trained home economists make a sustained commitment to the core ideology of home economics. Mechanisms for identifying locally relevant challenges faced by individuals, families, and communities are embedded in the home economics knowledge base. To identify challenges and locate solutions (who, what, when, where, and how), home economics education programmes must actively teach or provide explicit instruction about the ideology that underpins the home economics disciplinary field. Neglecting ideology results in teaching unrelated subjects or compartmentalised content that may dilute connection to the core aims of the home economics’ ‘big picture’. This paper outlines how explicit instruction and embedded home economics ideology have positively impacted perceptions of the discipline amongst professionals who are new to the field. In teaching and learning environments, making home economics ideology visible and reinforced continuously across all content specialisation areas, the author observed that students acquired the words and concepts to explain the importance of home economics to others. Professionals who are new to the field became more confident and passionate advocates for home economics, because they had learnt and appreciated, through explicit instruction techniques, the what, the how to, and the why of home economics. Equipped with the discipline’s core ideology, professionals who make visible the home economics ‘big picture’ (i.e., the why) to others are better equipped to enact real-world applications of home economics that can adapt continuously to meet ever-changing and complex societal needs. (DIPF/Orig.)
Journal Article
Between academia and school: habitus reflexivity as one way of dealing with the theory-practice tension in teacher education
by
Scheer, Lisa
,
Mendel, Iris
,
Kink-Hampersberger, Susanne
in
Habitus
,
Hochschulbildung
,
Hochschule
2023
Teacher education's primary goal is to train prospective teachers, which differs from study programmes, such as philosophy or mathematics, that do not cater to defined professions. This traditional understanding of the teaching profession becomes apparent when students ask: 'How is this content, topic, method, task, or question relevant to school work?' It is also reflected in the inclusion of practical school training in teacher education curricula. In Austria's teacher training, these practical elements are accompanied by theoretical and methodological teaching foundations. However, students often question the applicability of theoretical knowledge to the teaching profession, which creates tension between the academic and pedagogical orientations. This paper discusses these very theory-practice tensions in teacher education based on findings from the project Habitus.Power.Education, which involved student teachers at an Austrian university. The authors argue that teacher training at universities is neither merely a place for producing a future workforce nor a self-growth space without purpose. Teacher training, rather, combines both (sometimes ambivalent) elements: education in its broadest sense and professional training. Using their empirical material, the authors show that the theory-praxis gap manifests in the tension between academic and pedagogical orientation. To address and mediate this tension, they propose the concept of habitus reflexivity. Promoting such a form of reflexivity among students makes it possible to bridge the gap between the different logics of university and school. Furthermore, it helps to comprehend inequality and power imbalances in the education system and develop agency, which is essential for navigating the ever-changing and complex world of modern schools. (DIPF/Orig.)
Journal Article
An exploration of teacher leadership: are future teachers ready to lead?
2023
The teaching profession has become increasingly complex in the last decades. The changing role of teachers has called for a new paradigm of the teaching profession that recognises the potential of teachers to lead for supporting school development and change. The influence teachers have on the school community and their commitment to school change are at the core of teacher leadership definitions. Preparing future teachers to act as leaders in their schools can support the overall efforts for school improvement. Hence, the purpose of this study is to explore pre-service teacher leadership development. The study utilised a qualitative methodology to address: (i) pre-service teachers' understanding of teacher leadership, (ii) the role of initial teacher education in shaping the understanding of teacher leadership, and (iii) the contribution of initial teacher education to pre-service teachers' readiness for exercising leadership roles for school improvement. The study was conducted with pre-service teachers in the leading initial teacher education institution in Kosovo. A total of 42 pre-service teachers from all years of the Primary Teacher Education programme participated in four group interviews with the aim of discussing in depth the core elements of teacher leadership in order to better grasp the pre-service teachers' understanding of this concept as well as their readiness to exercise leadership roles. A model devised by Snoek et al. (2019) was used as an analytical framework to determine the development of teacher leadership in initial teacher education. The study reveals that there is no consensus on the definition of teacher leadership. The findings show that the understanding of teacher leadership is based on a contextually drawn vision of what it means to be a teacher, resulting in a narrow view of leadership with regard to individual and classroom levels. The study concludes that initial teacher education has a critical role in contributing to shifting the conceptualisation of teacher leadership beyond the isolated views of individual and formal leadership. The findings have imperative implications for providing good models of initial teacher education that support the preparation and readiness of future teacher leaders to tackle the ever-increasing complexities of the teaching profession. (DIPF/Orig.)
Journal Article
Effects of teachers' mathematical knowledge for teaching on student achievement
by
Hill, Heather C.
,
Ball, Deborah Loewenberg
,
Rowan, Brian
in
Academic achievement
,
Achievement Gains
,
Berufserfahrung
2005
This study explored whether and how teachers' mathematical knowledge for teaching contributes to gains in students' mathematical achievement: The authors used a linear mixed-model methodology in which first and third graders' mathematical achievement gains over a year were nested within teachers, who in turn were nested within schools. They found that teachers' mathematical knowledge was significantly related to student achievement gains in both first and third grades after controlling for key student- and teacher-level covariates. This result, while consonant with findings from the educational production function literature, was obtained via a measure focusing on the specialized mathematical knowledge and skills used in teaching mathematics. This finding provides support for policy initiatives designed to improve students' mathematics achievement by improving teachers' mathematical knowledge. (DIPF/Orig.).
Journal Article
Five research-based heuristics for using video in pre-service teacher education
by
Renkl, Alexander
,
Seidel, Tina
,
Borko, Hilda
in
Beginning Teachers
,
Behavioral Objectives
,
Effektivität
2013
Der Beitrag liefert eine Forschungssynthese zur Nutzung von Video in der universitären Lehrerausbildung. Die Forschung wird dahingehend zusammengefasst, welche Ideen derzeit verfolgt werden und welche Evidenzen zur Nutzung von Video vorliegen. Basierend auf dem Forschungsstand leiten die Autoren fünf forschungsbasierte Heuristiken zum Einsatz von Video ab. Die Forschungsergebnisse einer Reihe ausgewählter Studien werden genutzt, um die Heuristiken weiter zu spezifizieren. Es werden Erfahrungsregeln vorgestellt, wann, wie und warum Video in der universitären Lehrerbildung eingesetzt werden kann. Die Erfahrungsregeln sollen helfen, Stärken und Schwächen von Video als ein Medium zur Unterstützung des Lernens von Lehramtsstudierenden zu klären. (DIPF/Orig.).
This article provides a research synthesis on the use of video in pre-service teacher education. Common ideas and evidences concerning the use of video in pre-service teacher education are reviewed. Based on the state-of-the-art in using video, five research-based heuristics are derived. Research findings of a number of studies are further used to illustrate the specification of heuristics. Specifically, a set of rules of thumb about when, how, and why to use video is presented to clarify the strengths and limitations of video as a medium to support pre-service teacher learning. (DIPF/Orig.).
Journal Article
Contemporary issues of social justice
2016
Ongoing events in the United States show the continual need to address issues of social justice in every social context. Of particular note in this article, the contemporary national focus on race has thrust social justice issues into the forefront of the country's conscious. Although legal segregation has ran its course, schools and many neighborhoods remain, to a large degree, culturally, ethnically, linguistically, economically, and racially segregated and unequal (Orfield & Lee, 2005). Even though an African American president presently occupies the White House, the idea of a postracial America remains an unrealized ideal. Though social justice and racial discussions are firmly entrenched in educational research, investigations that focus on race are scant in physical education literature. Here, we attempt to develop an understanding of social justice in physical education with a focus on racial concerns. We purposely confine the examination to the U.S. context to avoid the dilution of the importance of these issues, while recognizing other international landscapes may differ significantly. To accomplish this goal, we hope to explicate the undergirding theoretical tenants of critical race theory and culturally relevant pedagogy in relation to social justice in physical education. Finally, we make observations of social justice in the physical education and physical education teacher education realms to address and illuminate areas of concern. (Autor).
Journal Article
Building professional identity during pre-service teacher education
by
Domingo-Peñafiel, Laura
,
Simó-Gil, Núria
,
Torres-Cladera, Gemma
in
Berufliche Identität
,
Gruppendiskussion
,
Hochschullehre
2021
This article explores how university learning and the period of school placement can contribute to identity development understood as a dynamic and evolving process. From this perspective, we understand the teacher’s professional identity as an ongoing process of interpretation and re-interpretation of experiences that are shaped in professional spaces of relationship with others, where each person makes different processes of identification, representations, and attributions, creating a spiral of continuous construction or reconstruction. It is thus a phenomenon of social interaction. Data collection involved eight students, their school tutors, and university teachers within the framework of 4th-year school placements. Data analysis was organised around three dimensions of the research project: the teacher him/herself, the bond between students and the educational community, and the relationship between the school and the university. The results highlighted the need to improve the practicum, especially at the university level. Both school and university tutors are crucial in promoting and guiding dialogical processes of knowledge construction with oneself, others, and the world. However, the university has an added responsibility in this key relational process; university tutors must improve their role as mediators between students and school tutors to contribute to the development of the teaching identity in a complex and dynamic way. (DIPF/Orig.)
Journal Article
The impact of external contextual factors on teaching candidates
2021
The formation of a teacher’s identity is considered a dynamic process influenced by internal and external contextual factors. This article explores the impact that external contextual factors have on teacher candidates’ identities by presenting the findings of an empirical qualitative study that investigated the relationship between teacher candidates’ beliefs and their demonstrations and representations of teaching and learning on a nationally standardised portfolio assessment. Metaphor analysis and stimulated recall were used to explore this relationship. The study found that teacher candidates’ teaching demonstrations while student teaching and representations of teaching found in a nationally standardised portfolio assessment were severely constrained by cooperating teachers and scripted curriculums. However, the study also found that candidates could articulate the differences between their beliefs about teaching and learning and their demonstrations and representations of teaching and learning. Candidates routinely made suggestions in the portfolio assessment to align their future teaching more closely to their metaphors for teaching. The study concluded that candidates did not change their beliefs but took up temporary teaching identities based on these findings. They found ways to navigate the assessment and their (teaching) context while remaining committed to their teaching identity and beliefs about good teaching. This article suggests how education system contexts impact the formation of teacher candidates’ identities and what teacher education programmes need to do to strengthen candidates’ identities in the face of negative external influences. (DIPF/Orig.)
Journal Article
Teacher educators’ professional identity in English-medium instruction at a Finnish university
2021
Although different forms of English-medium instruction (EMI) are being recognised, the different ways in which EMI can impact the pedagogical activities and expertise of higher education educators have received less attention. Using face-to-face and written interviews with nine teacher educators at a Finnish university, this study examines the most important aspects teacher educators perceive in their work through EMI and how these aspects connect to the understanding of their professional identity. The study is theoretically premised on the interconnected concepts of pedagogical doing, pedagogical being, pedagogical relating, and pedagogical language awareness. The thematically analysed data highlighted the ways in which pedagogical being, doing, and relating revolve around the presence and role of the foreign language in EMI, as well as the concurrent disjunctures and opportunities EMI creates. Pedagogical being informed EMI teacher educators’ orientation to their work and the different ways language impinges on the sense of self as the teacher educators share how they try to understand and respond to the disjunctures of EMI. In terms of pedagogical doing, EMI impinges on how teacher educators enact their practice and the relationships developed with students. However, the focus of pedagogical relating addresses the relationship between the EMI teacher educators and their workplace. The findings from this study will hopefully contribute to the development of EMI teacher preparation and support critical discussions on the ‘Englishisation’ of higher education. (DIPF/Orig.)
Journal Article