Repetitive Microteaching:Learning to Teach Elementary Social Studies

The role of deliberate practice in the development of performance has been studied extensively in many contexts, such as in athletics. The construct of deliberate practice in the development of teacher performance has been receiving heightened examination lately, though the role of practice in the d...

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Main Authors: Derek L. ANDERSON, Don BARR, Christina LaBAIJ
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Journal of Social Studies Education Research 2012-11-01
Series:Journal of Social Studies Education Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://jsser.org/index.php/JSSER/article/viewFile/119/pdf
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spelling doaj-0ded0fa4b5be481b8aa69fe4b3334b832020-11-25T03:40:38ZengJournal of Social Studies Education Research Journal of Social Studies Education Research1309-91082012-11-01322144Repetitive Microteaching:Learning to Teach Elementary Social StudiesDerek L. ANDERSONDon BARRChristina LaBAIJThe role of deliberate practice in the development of performance has been studied extensively in many contexts, such as in athletics. The construct of deliberate practice in the development of teacher performance has been receiving heightened examination lately, though the role of practice in the development of elementary social studies teachers remains essentially unexplored. The purpose of this study was to investigate the impact of a repeated practice microteaching model on the teaching behaviors of 64 elementary preservice teachers (PSTs) who taught the same social studies lessons to small groups of 4th-grade students four times in succession. PST reflection journals from all PSTs, observational transcripts of 14 teaching pairs, focus group interviews with the PSTs, and informal cooperating teacher interviews revealed that the PSTs’ lessons changed over the four successive teaching episodes. The PSTs became more comfortable and confident after teaching the same social studies lesson multiple times. PSTs also reported that their lessons became better, yet the qualitative data revealed that even though their teaching became more efficient and student work correctness improved, only a few PSTs increased the cognitive demand of their questions and activities. Nonetheless, most PSTs demonstrated increased use of social studies pedagogical content knowledge through their examples and discussions, as well as increased attention to student thinking. Repeated practice field experiences seem to hold potential for elementary PSTs to develop their use ofsocial studies pedagogical content knowledgehttp://jsser.org/index.php/JSSER/article/viewFile/119/pdfteacher educationfield experiencespracticeelementary
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Derek L. ANDERSON
Don BARR
Christina LaBAIJ
spellingShingle Derek L. ANDERSON
Don BARR
Christina LaBAIJ
Repetitive Microteaching:Learning to Teach Elementary Social Studies
Journal of Social Studies Education Research
teacher education
field experiences
practice
elementary
author_facet Derek L. ANDERSON
Don BARR
Christina LaBAIJ
author_sort Derek L. ANDERSON
title Repetitive Microteaching:Learning to Teach Elementary Social Studies
title_short Repetitive Microteaching:Learning to Teach Elementary Social Studies
title_full Repetitive Microteaching:Learning to Teach Elementary Social Studies
title_fullStr Repetitive Microteaching:Learning to Teach Elementary Social Studies
title_full_unstemmed Repetitive Microteaching:Learning to Teach Elementary Social Studies
title_sort repetitive microteaching:learning to teach elementary social studies
publisher Journal of Social Studies Education Research
series Journal of Social Studies Education Research
issn 1309-9108
publishDate 2012-11-01
description The role of deliberate practice in the development of performance has been studied extensively in many contexts, such as in athletics. The construct of deliberate practice in the development of teacher performance has been receiving heightened examination lately, though the role of practice in the development of elementary social studies teachers remains essentially unexplored. The purpose of this study was to investigate the impact of a repeated practice microteaching model on the teaching behaviors of 64 elementary preservice teachers (PSTs) who taught the same social studies lessons to small groups of 4th-grade students four times in succession. PST reflection journals from all PSTs, observational transcripts of 14 teaching pairs, focus group interviews with the PSTs, and informal cooperating teacher interviews revealed that the PSTs’ lessons changed over the four successive teaching episodes. The PSTs became more comfortable and confident after teaching the same social studies lesson multiple times. PSTs also reported that their lessons became better, yet the qualitative data revealed that even though their teaching became more efficient and student work correctness improved, only a few PSTs increased the cognitive demand of their questions and activities. Nonetheless, most PSTs demonstrated increased use of social studies pedagogical content knowledge through their examples and discussions, as well as increased attention to student thinking. Repeated practice field experiences seem to hold potential for elementary PSTs to develop their use ofsocial studies pedagogical content knowledge
topic teacher education
field experiences
practice
elementary
url http://jsser.org/index.php/JSSER/article/viewFile/119/pdf
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