Oral and written competencies at a transitional stage: A study of narratives from first-year student teachers´ self-evaluations

The article presents a study concerning Norwegian student teachers’ understanding of their oral and written competencies in higher education, focusing on students in their initial teacher education studies as they prepare to become school teachers or kindergarten teachers. The study sought deeper in...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Torhild Erika Hoydalsvik, Hilde Randi Osdal
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universidad de Murcia 2020-09-01
Series:Educatio Siglo XXI
Subjects:
Online Access:https://revistas.um.es/educatio/article/view/424831
id doaj-b23ec85cbee549bb8e5bfa9f0525e596
record_format Article
spelling doaj-b23ec85cbee549bb8e5bfa9f0525e5962020-11-25T03:58:22ZengUniversidad de MurciaEducatio Siglo XXI 1699-21051989-466X2020-09-01383 Nov-Feb10.6018/educatio.424831Oral and written competencies at a transitional stage: A study of narratives from first-year student teachers´ self-evaluationsTorhild Erika Hoydalsvik0Hilde Randi Osdal1Volda University College, NorwayVolda University CollegeThe article presents a study concerning Norwegian student teachers’ understanding of their oral and written competencies in higher education, focusing on students in their initial teacher education studies as they prepare to become school teachers or kindergarten teachers. The study sought deeper insight into student teachers’ perceptions of their own performance in meeting the oral and written objectives of the academy. The study sample included the following categories of education students: part-time students at the bachelor’s level seeking to teach kindergarten, as well as full-time bachelor’s kindergarten students and full-time master’s students seeking to be primary and secondary educators. The findings in this analysis of student teachers’ experience, concerning oral and written competencies as expressed in sixty-seven narratives, indicated that they experienced high degrees of mastery for oral competency but lower levels for written competency. Further, students struggled with what they described as hidden or unclear expectations related to academic text production. Based on the findings of this study, the authors propose further investigation of students’ experiences in mastering language competencies. These findings on Norway will have parallels to other professional education programmes elsewhere in Europe.https://revistas.um.es/educatio/article/view/424831Teacher EducationStudent TeacherCompetenciesFormationTransitional stage
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Torhild Erika Hoydalsvik
Hilde Randi Osdal
spellingShingle Torhild Erika Hoydalsvik
Hilde Randi Osdal
Oral and written competencies at a transitional stage: A study of narratives from first-year student teachers´ self-evaluations
Educatio Siglo XXI
Teacher Education
Student Teacher
Competencies
Formation
Transitional stage
author_facet Torhild Erika Hoydalsvik
Hilde Randi Osdal
author_sort Torhild Erika Hoydalsvik
title Oral and written competencies at a transitional stage: A study of narratives from first-year student teachers´ self-evaluations
title_short Oral and written competencies at a transitional stage: A study of narratives from first-year student teachers´ self-evaluations
title_full Oral and written competencies at a transitional stage: A study of narratives from first-year student teachers´ self-evaluations
title_fullStr Oral and written competencies at a transitional stage: A study of narratives from first-year student teachers´ self-evaluations
title_full_unstemmed Oral and written competencies at a transitional stage: A study of narratives from first-year student teachers´ self-evaluations
title_sort oral and written competencies at a transitional stage: a study of narratives from first-year student teachers´ self-evaluations
publisher Universidad de Murcia
series Educatio Siglo XXI
issn 1699-2105
1989-466X
publishDate 2020-09-01
description The article presents a study concerning Norwegian student teachers’ understanding of their oral and written competencies in higher education, focusing on students in their initial teacher education studies as they prepare to become school teachers or kindergarten teachers. The study sought deeper insight into student teachers’ perceptions of their own performance in meeting the oral and written objectives of the academy. The study sample included the following categories of education students: part-time students at the bachelor’s level seeking to teach kindergarten, as well as full-time bachelor’s kindergarten students and full-time master’s students seeking to be primary and secondary educators. The findings in this analysis of student teachers’ experience, concerning oral and written competencies as expressed in sixty-seven narratives, indicated that they experienced high degrees of mastery for oral competency but lower levels for written competency. Further, students struggled with what they described as hidden or unclear expectations related to academic text production. Based on the findings of this study, the authors propose further investigation of students’ experiences in mastering language competencies. These findings on Norway will have parallels to other professional education programmes elsewhere in Europe.
topic Teacher Education
Student Teacher
Competencies
Formation
Transitional stage
url https://revistas.um.es/educatio/article/view/424831
work_keys_str_mv AT torhilderikahoydalsvik oralandwrittencompetenciesatatransitionalstageastudyofnarrativesfromfirstyearstudentteachersselfevaluations
AT hilderandiosdal oralandwrittencompetenciesatatransitionalstageastudyofnarrativesfromfirstyearstudentteachersselfevaluations
_version_ 1724457641601662976