The impact of prescriptive planning models on preservice English teachers' thought and on the classroom environments they create: an ethnographic study

In recent years, naturalistic studies of planning have shown the "hidden side of teaching," pictures of the ways teachers think before and after they enter the classroom. Few, however, have shown how prescriptive planning models impact on teacher thought and the classroom environments the...

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Main Author: Naff, Beatrice Ethel
Other Authors: Education
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/49867
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-498672021-02-17T05:35:28Z The impact of prescriptive planning models on preservice English teachers' thought and on the classroom environments they create: an ethnographic study Naff, Beatrice Ethel Education LD5655.V856 1987.N233 Classroom environment Teachers -- Attitudes Education -- Research In recent years, naturalistic studies of planning have shown the "hidden side of teaching," pictures of the ways teachers think before and after they enter the classroom. Few, however, have shown how prescriptive planning models impact on teacher thought and the classroom environments the they create; and none has looked at the impact of prescriptive planning models on preservice teacher thought. The purpose of my study was to create ethnographic descriptions of two preservice teachers’ thoughts and of the classroom environments they created. The major difference between the two participants was the prescriptive planning model used. One used a rational means-end planning model -- the model most commonly taught to prospective teachers when they are first introduced to unit planning. This model encourages the teacher to develop a written unit plan with a rationale, objectives, activities, and evaluation standards prior to the teaching of a lesson or set of lessons. The other preservice teacher used a recently developed recursive planning model that encourages brainstorming, design, and reflection based on a list of educational design variables that research has indicated have an impact on educational environments. My ethnographic findings reveal that the use of both planning models impacted on preservice teacher thought and on the classroom environments they created in terms of: 1. The quantity, quality, and content of the planners’ preactive and postactive thought, 2. the quantity of unplanned decisions that the planners made while teaching, 3. the overall organizing principle of their classroom environments, and 4. the way preservice teachers defined and practiced planning. Ed. D. incomplete_metadata 2014-08-13T14:38:38Z 2014-08-13T14:38:38Z 1987 Dissertation Text http://hdl.handle.net/10919/49867 OCLC# 16752158 In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ xii, 350 leaves application/pdf application/pdf Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic LD5655.V856 1987.N233
Classroom environment
Teachers -- Attitudes
Education -- Research
spellingShingle LD5655.V856 1987.N233
Classroom environment
Teachers -- Attitudes
Education -- Research
Naff, Beatrice Ethel
The impact of prescriptive planning models on preservice English teachers' thought and on the classroom environments they create: an ethnographic study
description In recent years, naturalistic studies of planning have shown the "hidden side of teaching," pictures of the ways teachers think before and after they enter the classroom. Few, however, have shown how prescriptive planning models impact on teacher thought and the classroom environments the they create; and none has looked at the impact of prescriptive planning models on preservice teacher thought. The purpose of my study was to create ethnographic descriptions of two preservice teachers’ thoughts and of the classroom environments they created. The major difference between the two participants was the prescriptive planning model used. One used a rational means-end planning model -- the model most commonly taught to prospective teachers when they are first introduced to unit planning. This model encourages the teacher to develop a written unit plan with a rationale, objectives, activities, and evaluation standards prior to the teaching of a lesson or set of lessons. The other preservice teacher used a recently developed recursive planning model that encourages brainstorming, design, and reflection based on a list of educational design variables that research has indicated have an impact on educational environments. My ethnographic findings reveal that the use of both planning models impacted on preservice teacher thought and on the classroom environments they created in terms of: 1. The quantity, quality, and content of the planners’ preactive and postactive thought, 2. the quantity of unplanned decisions that the planners made while teaching, 3. the overall organizing principle of their classroom environments, and 4. the way preservice teachers defined and practiced planning. === Ed. D. === incomplete_metadata
author2 Education
author_facet Education
Naff, Beatrice Ethel
author Naff, Beatrice Ethel
author_sort Naff, Beatrice Ethel
title The impact of prescriptive planning models on preservice English teachers' thought and on the classroom environments they create: an ethnographic study
title_short The impact of prescriptive planning models on preservice English teachers' thought and on the classroom environments they create: an ethnographic study
title_full The impact of prescriptive planning models on preservice English teachers' thought and on the classroom environments they create: an ethnographic study
title_fullStr The impact of prescriptive planning models on preservice English teachers' thought and on the classroom environments they create: an ethnographic study
title_full_unstemmed The impact of prescriptive planning models on preservice English teachers' thought and on the classroom environments they create: an ethnographic study
title_sort impact of prescriptive planning models on preservice english teachers' thought and on the classroom environments they create: an ethnographic study
publisher Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/49867
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