36 results on '"Primary teachers"'
Search Results
2. Inclusive pedagogy through the lens of primary teachers and teaching assistants in England.
- Author
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Losberg, Jessica and Zwozdiak-Myers, Paula
- Subjects
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CAREER development , *TEACHERS' assistants , *THEMATIC analysis , *SEMI-structured interviews , *INDIVIDUAL needs , *EDUCATION of children with disabilities - Abstract
Inclusion is an expectation of all mainstream schools across England yet research into strategies concerning how teachers and teaching assistants facilitate effective inclusive practice remains limited. This study explores the enactment of Florian and Black Hawkins (2011. "Exploring Inclusive Pedagogy." British Educational Research Journal 37 (5): 813–828) approach to inclusive pedagogy through the lens of teachers and teaching assistants working with children across year 4 within one primary school in London to redress this balance and identify any challenges they may encounter with this approach. Thematic analysis of semi-structured interviews revealed several key themes: whole-class approaches; emphasis on learners' capabilities; flexibility; commitment to ongoing professional development; diversity of needs; TA interventions; and ability-based tasks. While practitioners exemplified inclusive pedagogy on a regular basis it was difficult to implement in all aspects of classroom life, given the complex nature and diverse range of needs they encountered in mainstream classrooms. The importance of acknowledging individual needs was recognised and some key strategies to accommodate these without causing feelings of marginalisation were highlighted. Practitioners voiced positive experiences and placed great value on, working flexibly with one another to create welcoming environments for all children yet the effective deployment of TAs was not consistently realised. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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- View/download PDF
3. Educational inclusion in resource-constrained contexts: a study of rural primary schools in Cambodia.
- Author
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Ravet, Jackie and Mtika, Peter
- Subjects
- *
INCLUSION (Disability rights) , *RURAL schools , *PRIMARY schools , *TEACHER effectiveness , *OBSERVATION (Educational method) - Abstract
This study investigated the status of educational inclusion in resource-constrained, rural primary schools in Battambang Province, Cambodia using a mixed-method design. A Teacher Efficacy in Inclusive Practices (TEIP) scale was administered to sampled teachers and Headteachers. Classroom observations were undertaken in five schools. Interviews were conducted with selected teachers and other education officials. The findings indicate dissatisfaction with the current quality of educational inclusion and identify barriers to good practice. The paper highlights priorities for enhancing educational inclusion in rural, resource-constrained contexts and recommends a participatory and culturally sensitive framework for improving overall quality of education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. The practices of pupil behaviour management according to primary pupils' parents and teachers in Vietnam.
- Author
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Hằng, Ngô Vũ Thu and Hường, Vũ Thị Mai
- Subjects
- *
SCHOOL children , *BEHAVIOR modification , *PRIMARY school teachers , *OUTCOME-based education - Abstract
This study presented the practices of pupil behaviour management of Vietnamese primary teachers with a focus on primary pupils' misbehaviours, and the activities the primary teachers implemented to manage this misbehaviour. 1,545 primary pupils' parents and teachers from all three main areas in Vietnam took part in the questionnaire surveys. Mathematical statistical methods were used to analyse data along with collating the perceptions between primary teachers and parents. The results showed that pupil behaviour management had been implemented to a positive extent by the primary teachers in classroom practices. The primary teachers frequently implemented the activities of pupil behaviour management to deal with pupils' misbehaviours, and this could help prevent misbehaviour in classroom practices. Nevertheless, the study also revealed that one of the emergent problems that needs to be solved in order to achieve better pupil behaviour management is pupils' inattentive attitudes in learning. A possible reason was attributed to the teachers' less cares and the lower frequency with which interactive instruction was implemented by the primary teachers in their teaching practices. The study suggested that an appropriate strategy of pupil behaviour management for Vietnamese primary teachers needed to be designed in order to help better engage pupils in learning and to meet the requirements of the ongoing implementation of competence-based curricula. A social constructivist approach with its interactive and meaningful features was recommended for further studies to work on designing an appropriate behaviour management strategy for pupils in a Confucian heritage culture such as Vietnam. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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5. Teachers' perception of the characteristics of an evidence-informed school: initiative, supportive culture, and shared reflection.
- Author
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Ion, Georgeta and Sirvent, Ernest López
- Subjects
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PRIMARY school teachers , *PRIMARY schools , *SCHOOL environment , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *LEADERSHIP , *PRIMARY education , *CHILDREN - Abstract
The article analyses the characteristics of schools according to the perception teachers have regarding their commitment to using research evidence within their practice. A questionnaire focused on issues such as the use of research evidence to improve schools, as well as factors known to influence this practice, such as organizational culture, leadership style, interpersonal relationships, and decision-making processes, was administered to a sample of 462 teachers from 204 primary schools in two Spanish autonomous regions. The questionnaire responses were analysed using a two-stage factor analysis. Three clusters of schools were identified. Although teachers from a large number of schools were enthusiastic regarding the use of research evidence, others were sceptical, and most declared themselves undecided. In all cases, we observed that organizational commitment to the use of research evidence, leadership support, and debate regarding decisions were significant characteristics of those schools oriented towards the use of research evidence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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6. Primary Teachers' Principles for High-Quality Distance Teaching During COVID-19.
- Author
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Mankki, Ville
- Subjects
- *
COVID-19 , *SCHOOL lockdowns , *PHENOMENOGRAPHY , *ONLINE education , *DISTANCE education - Abstract
School lockdowns in response to COVID-19 have forced teachers around the world to quickly and unexpectedly shift from face-to-face to distance teaching. The struggle with the forced transition has been even more severe in the lower levels of schooling than in higher education institutions, which had already established online course delivery before the crisis. The current paper investigates Finnish primary teachers' principles for high-quality distance teaching. Twenty primary teachers were interviewed in April 2020 during the fourth week of the two-month distance teaching period. The findings from phenomenographic analysis revealed that high-quality distance teaching at the primary level requires (1) relatedness, (2) design, (3) routine, and (4) control. This study illustrates the understanding of teachers' working in a basic education system ranked among the best in the world and thus provides valuable insights for developing instructional practices in distance education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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7. Primary teachers' professional learning during a COVID-19 school lockdown.
- Author
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Mankki, Ville and Räihä, Pekka
- Subjects
- *
PRIMARY school teachers , *PROFESSIONAL education , *COVID-19 pandemic , *DISTANCE education - Abstract
The COVID-19 crisis forced education providers around the world to cancel contact teaching in schools as part of measures to limit contact between people and to slowdown the spread of the virus. The rapid and unexpected transition to distance teaching in the beginning of the pandemic posed an unprecedented challenge for teachers and placed a significant demand on their informal professional learning. This study focused on Finnish primary teachers' professional learning domains and activities during the first weeks of Finland's COVID-19 school lockdown. The aim was to understand what and how primary teachers learnt during the beginning of the distance teaching period. Semi-structured interviews were conducted individually with 20 Finnish primary school teachers, all of whom had been delivering distance teaching from the beginning of the lockdown, during the fourth week of the distance teaching period. Two separate qualitative analyses were undertaken. The first analysis indicated that teachers' professional learning involved more than progress in the most self-evident and apparent technological knowledge domain: learning was also firmly connected to pedagogical knowledge and coping skills. The second analysis identified the individual learning activities, such as learning by doing, experimenting and considering one's own teaching practice, and revealed three levels of collective learning activities (with a close colleague, in the school community and in larger online communities) carried out with the aim of improving distance teaching. The study draws attention to primary teachers' multifaceted professional learning domains and the activities entered into during the rapid shift from contact to distance teaching. It highlights that even in emergency circumstances, teachers' individual and collective learning processes are interrelated and supplementary to each other. Educators' hard-earned understanding achieved in relation to distance teaching should be nurtured and refined to further benefit and support the profession. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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8. Agency and fidelity in primary teachers' efforts to develop mathematical resilience.
- Author
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Lee, Clare and Ward-Penny, Robert
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PRIMARY school teachers ,MATHEMATICS education ,LOYALTY ,PSYCHOLOGICAL resilience ,ANXIETY - Abstract
Teaching using the principles of mathematical resilience can lead to a broad range of implementations with different emphases, all intended to mitigate the development of mathematical anxiety in learners and its attendant problems. This article considers 12 primary teachers' responses to the challenge of developing mathematical resilience within their practice. In pairs, these teachers conducted a small-scale study in their classrooms on a chosen aspect of mathematical resilience, supported by termly meetings. The reports made by the participant teachers form the main part of the data. The teachers were inspired to change how they worked with their learners and reported many positive outcomes. The agency which some teachers exercised influenced not only their outworking of the ideas, but also the fidelity with which they adopted the principles underpinning mathematical resilience. The connections and tensions shown here between agency and fidelity have wider implications for successful implementation of similar change efforts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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9. In pursuit of primary teachers' work motivation amid increased external neoliberal pressure in education.
- Author
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Näkk, Anne-Mai and Timoštšuk, Inge
- Subjects
EMPLOYEE motivation ,NEOLIBERALISM ,PSYCHOLOGY of teachers ,WORK experience (Employment) ,TEACHER development - Abstract
This study explored factors that were important to primary teachers' motivation due to increased pressure caused by changes associated with a global neoliberal movement. A questionnaire (n = 243) was conducted to gain an overview of factors causing pressure on teachers. Interviews (n = 13) were conducted to reveal factors relevant to teachers' motivation in the past, present, and future. The study indicated that teachers, regardless of type of motivation, felt the same extent of external control and experienced similar reasons for pressure. The study showed that autonomous motivation was more present than controlled motivation, and that the teachers emphasised support rather than external pressure. The study also found that a type of motivation could change due to the application of a variety of coping strategies. Therefore, when teachers experience external pressures, they benefit from consistent support. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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10. Expert recommendations for the design of a teacher-oriented movement assessment tool for children aged 4-7 years: a Delphi study.
- Author
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Van Rossum, Tom, Foweather, Lawrence, Hayes, Spencer, Richardson, David, and Morley, David
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CONSENSUS (Social sciences) , *EXERCISE tests , *EXPERIMENTAL design , *MENTAL orientation , *ATTITUDE (Psychology) , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL personnel , *COLLEGE teacher attitudes , *MOVEMENT disorders , *BODY movement , *TEACHERS , *EXPERTISE , *CONTENT analysis , *ELEMENTARY schools , *DELPHI method , *MOTOR ability , *PHYSICAL education , *CHILDREN - Abstract
The aim of this study was to establish the content of a teacher-oriented movement assessment tool (MAT) for children aged 4–7 years. A three-round Delphi poll with an international panel of forty-six academics and practitioners was conducted. Consensus was reached on a selection and number of fundamental movement skills to be assessed with four stability (one foot balance, walk forwards along a line, front support, and sideways roll), five object control (two handed catch, underarm throw, overarm throw, kicking a ball, dribbling a ball with hands), and five locomotor (run, hop, horizontal jump, side-stepping, and skipping). A developmental stage approach and process-oriented scoring were deemed most suitable. These findings present the requisite elements to develop a teacher-oriented MAT for children aged 4–7 years. This framework would provide teachers the opportunity to effectively assess children's FMS and subsequently intervene to improve movement competence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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11. Doing without believing – enacting policy in the English primary school.
- Author
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Braun, Annette and Maguire, Meg
- Subjects
PRIMARY school teachers ,PRIMARY schools ,PERFORMATIVE (Philosophy) ,AFFECT (Psychology) ,PRIMARY education - Abstract
This paper explores how six English primary school teachers enact assessment and attainment-focused policy and asks what this performative policy work does and whether it shapes or requires a new kind of primary teacher subjectivity. The paper draws on a small study of policy enactments in two primary schools in Greater London in order to discuss two dimensions of policy enactment that emerged from our data: first, shifting assessment regimes in primary schools which create an enactment environment of second-guessing policy; second, a shift in focus from the individual child to targeted groups that raises questions about more traditional primary school values. The paper concludes with a reflection on the effects of contradictory values and practices and how this policy context creates a form of 'doing without believing' in the English primary school. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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12. Attitudes to pupils with EBD: an implicit approach.
- Author
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Scanlon, Geraldine, McEnteggart, Ciara, and Barnes-Holmes, Yvonne
- Subjects
- *
AFFECTIVE disorders , *BEHAVIOR disorders in children , *COGNITIVE testing , *MAINSTREAMING in special education , *SELF-evaluation , *TEACHER-student relationships , *COLLEGE teacher attitudes , *PSYCHOLOGICAL factors - Abstract
Research has shown that the attitudes of teachers towards pupils can influence their academic and social behaviour. In the context of special education needs (SEN), the same processes likely apply, and there is evidence that teachers' attitudes influence the success of inclusive initiatives. While the literature on attitudes to pupils with SEN is limited, there is also a heavy reliance on self-reported methodologies that are susceptible to presentation bias. Across two studies, the current research employed the Implicit Relational Assessment Procedure (IRAP) to measure the implicit attitudes of teachers in training (N = 20), primary school teachers (N = 20), and post-primary teachers (N = 20) and a group of controls (N = 20) towards pupils with Emotional and Behavioural Difficulties (EBD), versus the implicit attitudes of primary school teachers (N = 20) and post-primary teachers (N = 20) towards typically-developing pupils. Results indicated that teachers possessed greater negative implicit and explicit attitudes towards pupils with EBD, when compared to typically-developing pupils. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Professional development needs of primary school teachers in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa to teach peace.
- Author
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Ashraf, Mehreen and Huma, Afshan
- Subjects
TEACHER development ,PRIMARY school teachers ,TEACHER training ,EDUCATIONAL websites - Abstract
Educating for peace is essential for students and teachers not only to understand the basis of aggression and conflict but also to independently resolve such situations in non-violent ways and hence, influence the behaviours anticipated for a peaceful society. The article 4 of the UN resolution 53/423 also proclaimed the need to promote peace education at each level. However, teachers are not likely to achieve the objectives so desired if they have not been trained in peace education. This paper examines the training needs of primary school teachers in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa to teach peace. By drawing on questionnaire, interviews and focus group data, the article reflects on consistent training of teachers about peace education concept and methodology to support them achieve the desired objectives. The research article identifies sensitisation workshops, revision of teacher training programmes and availability of peace education module on the provincial education website, beneficial for this purpose. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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14. The creative environment: teachers' perceptions, self-efficacy, and teaching experience for fostering children's creativity.
- Author
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Al-Dababneh, Kholoud Adeeb, Al-Zboon, Eman K., and Ahmad, Jamal
- Subjects
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CREATIVE ability in children , *SELF-efficacy in teachers , *TEACHING experience , *WOMEN teachers , *SENSORY perception , *SCHOOL year , *PRIMARY school teachers - Abstract
The purpose of this study was to compare the availability of a creative environment within regular schools between the academic year 2009/2010 and 2015/2016 by measuring teachers' perceptions concerning creativity, their self-efficacy, teaching creativity, and barriers to creativity. A questionnaire was developed and distributed among 297 teachers teaching the basic primary stage (grades 1–3). The findings indicated high averages for teaching creativity in the classroom, and teachers' self-efficacy to foster children's creativity in the classroom ranked the highest, while barriers to creativity ranked the lowest. The results showed significant differences due to teacher gender, in favour of female teachers, and teaching experience only regarding perceptions of the creativity domain. There were statistically significant differences between the academic years for the overall scale and the four domains in favour of the 2015/2016 academic year. Directions for further research and practical implications for policy and practice are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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15. Challenging traditional classroom practices: Swedish teachers' interplay with Finnish curriculum materials.
- Author
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Hemmi, Kirsti, Krzywacki, Heidi, and Liljekvist, Yvonne
- Subjects
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TEACHING methods , *CURRICULUM planning , *TEACHERS , *MATHEMATICS education , *EFFECTIVE teaching , *PROFESSIONAL education , *PRIMARY education , *SCHOOL children - Abstract
In the current paper, we present an analysis of a case study in which we have followed Swedish primary teachers who voluntarily began using translated Finnish curriculum materials, i.e. a textbook and teacher guide, in order to reform their mathematics teaching. The multifaceted data, consisting of questionnaires, interviews, protocols from collegial meetings and classroom observations, were gathered during the period 2010–2014. The analysis of the interplay within this cross-cultural setting reveals the special characteristics and the challenges existing in practice. Both the experienced and inexperienced teachers offloaded a great deal of their agency to the materials in order to become familiar with the ideas they mediated. Yet, the lack of a clear rationale behind the organization of the materials, as well as the suggested activities connected to taken-for-granted features of the Finnish teaching tradition, made fruitful interaction problematic. The changes teachers made in their classroom practice were tightly connected to the support offered in the materials, without which the teachers abandoned their new classroom patterns. Based on the results of this study, we suggest a number of general aspects that we regard as important to consider when implementing curriculum materials developed within another cultural-educational context. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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16. Primary Teachers' Recommendations for the Development of a Teacher-Oriented Movement Assessment Tool for 4–7 Years Children.
- Author
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van Rossum, Tom, Foweather, Lawrence, Richardson, David, Hayes, Spencer J., and Morley, David
- Subjects
- *
CURRICULUM , *EXPERIMENTAL design , *INFORMATION technology , *INTERVIEWING , *LEARNING , *RESEARCH methodology , *MOTOR ability , *PHYSICAL education , *PSYCHOLOGY of teachers , *CHILDREN - Abstract
To inform the development of a teacher-oriented movement assessment tool, this study aimed to explore primary school teachers' perceptions of assessing fundamental movement skills (FMS) within Physical Education (PE) lessons. Thirty-nine primary school teachers of PE, located in the United Kingdom, participated in an individual or group in-depth interview. Findings signify that teachers perceive a need for a movement assessment tool that is simple for them to use, quick to administer and provides valuable feedback to guide future teaching and learning. This is vital as teachers indicated a lack of appropriate resources and a shortage of curriculum time restricts their use of assessment within PE. A movement assessment tool that was integrated on a digital technology platform could increase teachers' understanding of assessing FMS and enhance children's learning of FMS. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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17. Becoming a primary education teacher - pedagogic discourses in the teacher education program’s examination practice.
- Author
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Player-Koro, Catarina and Sjöberg, Lena
- Subjects
TEACHER education ,PROFESSIONAL education ,STUDENT teachers ,TEACHERS ,EDUCATIONAL programs - Abstract
Global reforming driven by neoliberal ideas is today reshaping educational systems. This study explores how a national policy incentive, aimed at changing teacher education in Sweden, is transformed and realized into educational practice and how pedagogic discourses are operating in and through the primary teachers’ examination practice in Sweden. The aim is also to explore which competencies are legitimized and thus form the knowledge base for primary teachers. The study is conducted through a qualitative and quantitative, theoretically based, analysis of all examination tasks (n = 322) in the primary teacher education at a teacher education department located at one of Sweden’s largest universities. The qualitative software package Nvivo was used for the qualitative analysis and the statistical software SPSS was used for the quantitative analysis. The result shows that most examinations involve the examination of methodological/didactical knowledge related to teachers work in the classroom (out of horizontal knowledge structures) and that students lack opportunities to practice and show analytical skills, with vertical knowledge structures, in their examinations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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18. A critical account of what “geography” means to primary trainee teachers in England.
- Author
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Puttick, Steven, Paramore, John, and Gee, Nick
- Subjects
- *
GEOGRAPHY education , *GEOGRAPHY teachers , *TEACHER education , *TRAINING of student teachers , *CARTESIANISM (Philosophy) - Abstract
Research on trainee teachers’ conceptions of geography has criticised their views for being limited, and failing to appreciate the breadth or depth of geography. A body of research in this area has developed over the past two decades, producing well-established classifications through which to analyse conceptions of geography. This contribution breaks from these classifications by offering a critical review of the existing literature and then, drawing on critical theory, distinguishing between geography as knowing, understanding, and acting. Findings from a survey of first year undergraduate primary trainee teachers (
n = 42) are analysed through this critical framework, and it is argued that there is a distinct Cartesian duality in the way that respondents see the world as an object of study for learners as cognising subjects. This is argued to be problematic and, in response, a moral vision for school geography is outlined that represents geography in terms of a critical praxis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. The self-efficacy of primary teachers in supporting the inclusion of children with autism spectrum disorder.
- Author
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Anglim, Johanna, Prendeville, Paula, and Kinsella, William
- Subjects
- *
AUTISM spectrum disorders in children , *SELF-efficacy in teachers , *PRIMARY school teachers , *SCHOOLS , *SCHOOL children , *PRIMARY education - Abstract
In the context of a trend towards inclusive practice in Irish primary schools, many teachers feel ill-equipped to cope with this new challenge. Scope exists within the Irish education system to transform mainstream schools into autistic spectrum disorder (ASD) friendly environments. Research into teacher perceptions of inclusion has found that teachers’ views impact on how inclusionary practices are implemented. This study utilised semi-structured interviews with six primary school teachers. The data were analysed using interpretative phenomenological analysis (IPA). Findings from this study suggest that the majority of teachers were apprehensive and lacked confidence at the initial prospect of teaching a child with ASD. The majority of the teachers interviewed also described feelings of uncertainty in managing the behaviour of a child with ASD. These findings were analysed in the context of teachers’ perceptions of systemic issues such as lack of access to resources, support and training in ASD-specific approaches. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. The teacher as co-creator of drama: a phenomenological study of the experiences and reflections of Irish primary school teachers.
- Author
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McDonagh, Fiona and Finneran, Michael
- Subjects
- *
PRIMARY school teachers , *TEACHER training , *CLASSROOMS , *PHENOMENOLOGY , *TEACHER-student relationships - Abstract
Classroom drama in the Irish primary school context remains a relatively new endeavour and is largely under-researched. The knowledge base for all aspects of teacher education should be informed by rigorous reflection on teachers’ experiences in the classroom. This paper reports on a phenomenological study conducted with seven Irish primary school teachers which focused on their experiences of co-creating drama with their students. Co-creating drama is held in this work to be the coming together of teacher and students in a collective creative enterprise during the drama lesson. The term proposes a partnership whereby they operate as co-participants and co-artists in the drama experience. The ‘creating’ aspect of co-creating can be considered the artistic enterprise of making drama in a way that is new and unique to the group. In considering the teacher as a potential co-creator of drama, the paper probes the emergent and changing ontological attitudes of the participants throughout the process: the values, attitudes and perspectives that informed their teaching. The paper illuminates the phenomenon of teachers co-creating drama in all its complexity, and seeks to reflect on the meaning of this for the teachers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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21. Primary teachers conducting inquiry projects: effects on attitudes towards teaching science and conducting inquiry.
- Author
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van Aalderen-Smeets, Sandra I., Walma van der Molen, Juliette H., van Hest, Erna G. W. C. M., and Poortman, Cindy
- Subjects
- *
SCIENCE education , *PRIMARY school teachers , *SELF-evaluation , *SELF-efficacy , *CONTROL groups , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
This study used an experimental, pretest-posttest control group design to investigate whether participation in a large-scale inquiry project would improve primary teachers’ attitudes towards teaching science and towards conducting inquiry. The inquiry project positively affected several elements of teachers’ attitudes. Teachers felt less anxious about teaching science and felt less dependent on contextual factors compared to the control group. With regard to attitude towards conducting inquiry, teachers felt less anxious and more able to conduct an inquiry project. There were no effects on other attitude components, such as self-efficacy beliefs or relevance beliefs, or on self-reported science teaching behaviour. These results indicate that practitioner research may have a partially positive effect on teachers’ attitudes, but that it may not be sufficient to fully change primary teachers’ attitudes and their actual science teaching behaviour. In comparison, a previous study showed that attitude-focused professional development in science education has a more profound impact on primary teachers’ attitudes and science teaching behaviour. In our view, future interventions aiming to stimulate science teaching should combine both approaches, an explicit focus on attitude change together with familiarisation with inquiry, in order to improve primary teachers’ attitudes and classroom practices. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Moving towards effective physical education teacher education for generalist primary teachers: a view from Cyprus.
- Author
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Tsangaridou, Niki
- Subjects
PHYSICAL education ,EDUCATION ,TEACHER education ,PROFESSIONAL education ,PRIMARY education - Abstract
The preparation of effective teachers continues to be a critical issue in the literature since what teachers know and are able do is the most significant influence on what students learn. Teacher education programmes are considered to be the best places for teacher candidates to learn the knowledge, skills and attitudes they need to educate children. Physical education initial teacher education (PE-ITE) for generalist primary teachers is being challenged with regard to quality. The purpose of this article is to stimulate discourse on how teacher education for primary school teachers teaching physical education might be structured more effectively. The article begins with a description on how the PE-ITE programme for generalist teachers is designed and delivered at the University of Cyprus. The article then presents and discusses the most effective features of exemplary teacher education programmes and the most common qualities of newly qualified teachers who have been identified in the literature. Finally, the article presents some concluding thoughts on how the existing body of research should be used effectively by teacher educators. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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23. The opportunities to build on existing expertise in writing classrooms: a study of writing lessons in New Zealand primary schools.
- Author
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Jesson, Rebecca N. and Cockle, Victoria
- Subjects
EXPERTISE ,HANDWRITING ,PRIMARY schools ,PRIMARY education - Abstract
The present study investigated 15 Year 4–6 classrooms in two multicultural schools in New Zealand to understand what opportunities students had to draw on their diverse experiences of texts. A mixed-methods approach was taken, including classroom observations and student interviews. Results suggested that lessons were characterised by a consistent format of teacher-led, whole class instruction followed by independent writing. Conversations about prior knowledge typically sought display of taught items. Students saw few links between writing forms in school and texts out of school. The study highlights the role of lesson structure in framing incorporation of prior knowledge in writing lessons. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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24. Unawareness to Production, Dropout to Innovator—Primary teachers' understanding and use of a science, technology and society approach to science teaching.
- Author
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Rollnick, Marissa, Dlamini, Betty T., and Bradley, John
- Subjects
- *
SCIENCE education (Primary) , *TEACHER development , *SCIENCE teachers , *SCIENCE & society , *TECHNOLOGY & society , *PRIMARY education , *EDUCATION - Abstract
This paper investigates the process of teacher change in a group of 8 primary school teachers during their exposure to a science, technology and society (STS) approach to teaching Science in Swaziland. The research aimed to establish the effect of support given to teachers in using the approach through a series of workshops, followed by a 5-week supported implementation of the unit ‘matter and energy’. An analysis of the way in which the STS approach impacted on the classroom practice of the teachers yielded 2 outcomes that were hierarchical. First, teacher understanding of the approach was observed to go through levels of unawareness, recognition of differences in approach, utilisation, personalisation and production. Second, the teachers' level of use of the STS approach was observed to have been affected by their levels of understanding, characterised by the following typologies: dropouts, strugglers, domesticators, succeeders and innovators. Some relationship between levels of understanding and typology of use was found, however, the level of understanding was not the exclusive determinant of typology of use. Only teachers reaching the utilisation level were able to use the innovation in a sustainable way, while those at the level of unawareness were able to become domesticators, adapting the innovation to their usual teaching approach. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Constructing men who teach: research into care and gender as productive of the male primary teacher.
- Author
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Pulsford, Mark
- Subjects
- *
MALE teachers , *PRIMARY school teachers , *GENDER differences in education , *CARING , *MASCULINITY , *MIXED methods research , *PRIMARY education , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
This paper argues that in order to begin loosening the ties that bind care and gender in primary education, we need to re-examine the knowledge sought and found by educational research about teachers. The focus is primarily on how we understand men who teach. Through an examination of two scholarly texts – Ashley, M., and J. Lee [2003. Women Teaching Boys: Caring and Working in the Primary School. Stoke-on-Trent: Trentham] and King, J. [1998. Uncommon Caring: Learning from Men Who Teach Young Children. New York: TCP] – I argue that we must be mindful that our research can effectively produce and reiterate common-sense understandings of men that binds them to the hegemonic masculine ideal. It is argued that mixed-method qualitative research that untangles the layers of context influencing the lives of men who teach is important. The paper also suggests that the study of male teachers' emotions, as at once individual and social, and private and public, can disrupt the rational–emotional binary that cements care to gender and reveal new configurations of the gender order. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Enquiring into primary teachers' geographical knowledge.
- Author
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Catling, Simon and Morley, Emma
- Subjects
PRIMARY school teachers ,PEDAGOGICAL content knowledge ,LEARNING ,THEORY of knowledge ,GEOGRAPHY ,SCIENCE ,MATHEMATICS - Abstract
Subject knowledge is an important component of primary teachers' repertoire, though it has not been studied widely beyond their understandings of aspects of science and mathematics. Evaluations of the quality of teachers' geographical knowledge for teaching primary geography indicate a disparity between high quality teachers and less strong teachers. Good or weaker geography subject knowledge influences primary teachers' capacity to plan well for and intervene effectively in children's learning. This small-scale interview-based enquiry explores several teachers' senses of geography subject knowledge. They are enthusiasts for geography and are identified as expert teachers of the subject in their classes and schools. Five themes emerge as very tentative findings from their reflections: the subject's breadth, knowledge about the world, a living subject, an accessible subject for children and need for geography to be visible in the curriculum. There are indications that these primary teachers have a sense of geographical knowledge as informational knowledge, conceptual knowledge and geographical thinking. However, there were limits to these teachers' clear articulations of their understandings. Questions emerge about the nature and value of subject knowledge in relation to pedagogical content knowledge for primary teachers. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
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27. Primary Teachers' Understanding of Four Chemical Phenomena: Effect of an In-Service Training Course.
- Author
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Papageorgiou, George, Stamovlasis, Dimitrios, and Johnson, Philip
- Subjects
PRIMARY school teachers ,CHEMISTRY education ,TRAINING of chemistry teachers ,COMMON misconceptions ,TEACHER effectiveness ,COURSE content (Education) - Abstract
One hundred and thirty Greek primary school teachers participated in a study, where the effectiveness of a specially designed intervention on chemical changes was tested. The study took place in the wider context of an in-service training course where the key feature was an innovative approach based on the concept of a substance and its transformations, physical and chemical. In the present paper the focus is on the chemical transformations of substances. Pre-intervention, teachers were found to have a relatively limited ability in explaining chemical changes, which depends on the characteristics of the particular change, and they held a number of misconceptions similar to those of pupils. Post-intervention, teachers' descriptions and explanations were found to be significantly improved. Also, a relationship between teachers' particle ideas and their explanations was found. Implications for science education are also discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Prospective primary teachers’ self-efficacy and emotions in science teaching.
- Author
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Brígido, María, Borrachero, Ana Belen, Bermejo, Maria Luisa, and Mellado, Vicente
- Subjects
- *
PRIMARY school teachers , *SCIENCE education (Primary) , *SELF-efficacy , *EMOTIONS , *SCIENCE teachers , *TEACHER education - Abstract
The self-efficacy of prospective primary teachers was studied, considering in particular the relationship of that construct with the emotions they expect to experience as future science teachers, differentiating between when they will be teaching the content of the ‘nature sciences’ (biology and geology) and that of the ‘hard sciences’ (physics and chemistry). The study instrument was a questionnaire completed by 188 prospective primary school teachers in their initial education at the University of Extremadura during the academic year 2009/2010. The results showed them to mostly have positive emotions towards nature sciences and negative towards the hard sciences. While their beliefs concerning their self-efficacy are significantly related to their emotions about their future teaching of the hard sciences, high self-efficacy was significantly correlated with more positive emotions and fewer negative emotions towards physics and chemistry. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Measuring Primary Teachers' Attitudes Toward Teaching Science: Development of the Dimensions of Attitude Toward Science (DAS) Instrument.
- Author
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van Aalderen-Smeets, Sandra and Walma van der Molen, Juliette
- Subjects
- *
ATTITUDE (Psychology) , *SCIENCE education , *PROFESSIONALIZATION , *TEACHER attitudes , *TEACHING , *STATISTICS - Abstract
In this article, we present a valid and reliable instrument which measures the attitude of in-service and pre-service primary teachers toward teaching science, called the Dimensions of Attitude Toward Science (DAS) Instrument. Attention to the attitudes of primary teachers toward teaching science is of fundamental importance to the professionalization of these teachers in the field of primary science education. With the development of this instrument, we sought to fulfill the need for a statistically and theoretically valid and reliable instrument to measure pre-service and in-service teachers' attitudes. The DAS Instrument is based on a comprehensive theoretical framework for attitude toward (teaching) science. After pilot testing, the DAS was revised and subsequently validated using a large group of respondents (pre-service and in-service primary teachers) (N= 556). The theoretical underpinning of the DAS combined with the statistical data indicate that the DAS possesses good construct validity and that it proves to be a promising instrument that can be utilized for research purposes, and also as a teacher training and coaching tool. This instrument can therefore make a valuable contribution to progress within the field of science education. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Changing workloads of primary school teachers: ‘I seem to live on the edge of chaos’.
- Author
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Bridges, Sue and Searle, Annette
- Subjects
- *
TEACHERS' workload , *PRIMARY school teachers , *JOB satisfaction , *SUSTAINABILITY - Abstract
The roles and workloads of teachers have been widely noted as changing considerably over recent decades. In this 2009 replication of a 1992 study, 379 New Zealand primary school educators are surveyed regarding their workloads, how these changed and their perceived sustainability. It investigates how respondents believe that educational reforms and initiatives impact on their work, their home life, their health, and their view of teaching as a career. Results from both cohorts signal warnings to school leaders as workloads increase in hours and complexity, leaving educators to grapple with the complicated balance of demands made of them. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2011
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31. Primary Teachers' Particle Ideas and Explanations of Physical Phenomena: Effect of an in-service training course.
- Author
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Papageorgiou, George, Stamovlasis, Dimitrios, and Johnson, Phil Michael
- Subjects
- *
PRIMARY school teachers , *PRIMARY school teaching , *PRIMARY education , *PHYSICS , *IN-service training of teachers , *PHYSICS education - Abstract
This paper presents a study concerning Greek primary school teachers' (n = 162) ideas about the particulate nature of matter and their explanations of physical phenomena. The study took place during an in-service training course where the effectiveness of a specially designed intervention was tested. A key feature was an approach based on the concept of a substance and its states rather than “solids, liquids, and gases”. Pre-intervention, the teachers held misconceptions similar to those of pupils. Also, there seemed to be some relationship between the teachers' particle model ideas and their explanations of phenomena. Post-intervention, the teachers' descriptions and explanations were found to be significantly improved, with almost zero correlation between pre- and post-intervention scores. Implications for science education are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Teacher learning and policy intention: selected findings from an evaluation of a large-scale programme of professional development in the Republic of Ireland.
- Author
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Murchan, Damian, Loxley, Andrew, and Johnston, Keith
- Subjects
- *
CAREER development , *CONTINUING education , *TEACHERS , *EDUCATION , *KNOWLEDGE acquisition (Expert systems) , *SOCIAL change , *TEACHING , *CLASSROOMS - Abstract
The study reported on in this paper is set in the context of a national programme of professional development for primary teachers in the Republic of Ireland which has been in operation since 1999 and finished in 2008. The paper explores the acquisition and interpretation by teachers of the elements of the reform. The authors consider the extent to which the professional development experiences facilitated change in teachers' knowledge and if the teachers interpreted this in the way expected by policy-makers. The theoretical basis to the study draws on previous research that conceptualises teacher learning/knowledge acquisition and the change process as being dependant on an interwoven mix of factors, including teacher, school and policy-level contexts and characteristics. To a large degree the findings of this study do not deviate wildly from this prior work, which suggests that policy-makers and planners of CPD programmes, despite their best intentions, still need to be cognisant of such factors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
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33. Trainee primary-school teachers' perceptions of their effectiveness in teaching music.
- Author
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Hallam, Susan, Burnard, Pamela, Robertson, Anne, Saleh, Chris, Davies, Valerie, Rogers, Lynne, and Kokatsaki, Dimitra
- Subjects
- *
MUSIC education , *NATIONAL curriculum , *BRITISH education system , *PRIMARY school teachers , *TRAINING - Abstract
In England, there have been concerns that some primary teachers lack the necessary skills to teach the National Curriculum. The aim of this research was to ascertain the level of confidence of students completing a one-year primary teacher-training programme in relation to teaching in general and teaching music in particular. 341 students from four higher education institutions in England completed a short questionnaire. While almost all teachers had confidence in their ability to teach, only about half were confident about teaching music. There were statistically significant differences in response depending on whether the students played one or more musical instruments. Instrumentalists were more confident, those playing more than one instrument exhibiting the highest levels. Most students believed that more time should be spent on training, although they praised its quality. The implications of the findings are discussed and alternative ways of addressing the problem are considered. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Teacher creativity within the current education system: a case study of the perceptions of primary teachers.
- Author
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Dobbins, Kerry
- Subjects
PRIMARY school teachers ,CREATIVE ability ,EDUCATION policy ,CURRICULUM ,PRIMARY education ,CASE studies - Abstract
This article reports on a case study that examined the views of primary teachers in one school about their ability to be creative practitioners within the current education system. This research was conducted following the recent emphasis that teacher creativity has been given in government debate. Semi-structured interviews were carried out with 10 members of teaching staff. The main findings presented suggest that the pressures of the curriculum, and the targets and objectives laid down within it, severely restrict and constrain the creative practices that the teachers in this school feel able and willing to engage in. Perceptions of the relevance and value of teacher creativity are also discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Turning to teaching: gender and career choice.
- Author
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Raggl, Andrea and Troman, Geoff
- Subjects
- *
VOCATIONAL guidance , *GENDER inequality , *CAREER changes , *EDUCATIONAL sociology , *TEACHING & society , *GRADUATE study in education - Abstract
As the largest public sector institution in the United Kingdom, education is a key site for studying the context of 'choice' and changes in the identities of professional workers in contemporary society. Recruitment and retention problems in education have led to the creation of new routes into teaching to attract career changers from other professions and occupations. In this paper we focus on career changers within the Economic and Social Research Council project 'Primary Teacher Identity, Commitment and Career in Performative School Cultures' who have entered teaching from other private sector occupations. We analyse these career changes in terms of 'turning points' in the participants' lives in order to assess the extent to which choices are 'self-initiated', 'forced' or 'structural'. We are interested in the basis on which these choices were made and the impact of gender on career decisions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Are teachers walking the walk or just talking the talk in science education?
- Author
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Keys, Philip M.
- Subjects
- *
TEACHERS , *SCIENCE education , *CURRICULUM , *CURRICULUM change , *CURRICULUM planning , *EDUCATION - Abstract
Actions speak louder than words. Teachers may verbally agree with curriculum change but seldom do their statements match up with their classroom practice and, as a result, the intended curriculum is never fully implemented. The study described below reports on how primary and secondary teachers’ statements of belief, otherwise referred to as expressed beliefs, influenced the implementation of a new science curriculum. Through the methodology of educational criticism the results revealed that teachers made use of a set of expressed beliefs to influence the direction of the science curriculum. Teachers’ expressed beliefs were categorized into four subsets: platonic expressed beliefs, organizational beliefs, associated beliefs and transitional beliefs. The outcome of this study provides leaders in educational reform with an understanding of the influence of teachers’ beliefs in the direction of curriculum change. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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