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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

THE COLLECTIVE PERCEPTIONS OF K-12 SPECIAL EDUCATION TEACHERS DURING THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC

Katowitz, David, 0000-0002-8681-5387 January 2021 (has links)
In the spring of 2020, nearly every school aged student and K-12 teacher across the United States was forced to participate in remote educational activities online, prompting an unexpected departure from the status quo in public education. This was a result of government mandated social distancing practices, as a mitigation strategy for combating the global pandemic induced by the novel coronavirus. Most school districts were compelled to repurpose their daily practices by rapidly planning to ascertain resources for the implementation of an emergency remote education initiative. These unprecedented events presented many challenges for educators, especially given most had no formal training for conducting online instructional delivery utilizing various technologies. Special education teachers in particular confronted a unique set of challenges when considering how to support the complex needs of diverse learners. This included student support for engagement with access to technology, knowledge of various applied technological pedagogical skills, teacher preparation, technical training, ongoing professional support, interactions with stakeholders, and individual social emotional well-being. The purpose of this study was to determine how special education teachers perceived various aspects of their experiences, when teaching remotely during the COVID-19 pandemic. A survey was designed to measure these perceptions containing aligned items to the domains of the technological pedagogical and content knowledge (TPACK) framework. The COVID-19 Special Education Teacher Survey (C-SETS) was a 42 item questionnaire set on a 5-point Likert scale that contained an additional open-ended question. It was administered online and completed by 280 participants, across 46 states, primarily via a social media platform. While the results demonstrated that special education teachers overall were technically skilled, had increased communication with parents/caregivers, and gained skills for future practices, there was a significantly insufficient level of preparation, a deficit with various pedagogical skills using technology, less collaboration with IEP team members, inconsistent student engagement, varying access to technology, a lack of technical training, ongoing professional development and support, contributing to social emotional stress, anxiety and fatigue. Aspects of these findings were particularly evident in historically under resourced districts and those that did not participate in technology infrastructure initiatives, where an overwhelming majority of the statistically significant differences, with the exception of respondents' level of educational attainment, were attributed to school characteristics. Implications for future teacher preparation, technical training, ongoing professional development, and best practices are presented. Keywords: Special Education, COVID-19, Teacher Preparation, TPACK, Emergency Remote Education, Digital Divide, SEL, Educational Technology, Students with Disabilities, Technical Training, Professional Development, Social Media, Facebook, Pandemic, C-SETS / Special Education
2

Percepciones de los usos de recursos tecnológicos por docentes de educación inicial en instituciones privadas durante la educación remota de emergencia

Allan Bartra, Samantha, Mariátegui Fernández-Stoll, Alejandra 28 February 2022 (has links)
La educación remota de emergencia se ha convertido en la principal estrategia educativa para que los alumnos de todo el mundo puedan garantizar su continuidad de los estudios de todos los niveles. Aquello conlleva a un uso de soluciones de enseñanzas totalmente remotas a la educación donde la tecnología cumple un rol protagónico; y por ende, los maestros se convierten en alfabetizadores digitales. El objetivo de este estudio es indagar acerca de las percepciones de los usos de las TIC por docentes de educación inicial en instituciones privadas de Lima dentro de la educación inicial durante la educación remota de emergencia con el fin de recolectar datos y experiencias de las docentes para así, conocer las percepciones; el uso que se les dio a las TIC; de la misma manera que los procesos y desafíos que atravesaron durante dicho contexto. Las entrevistas realizadas fueron analizadas mediante un análisis temático y los resultados de estas indicaron que a pesar de los desafíos y limitaciones presentadas por el contexto de la pandemia y por el propio centro educativo, las TIC tienen consecuencias positivas en los estudiantes y en los docentes de educación inicial. / Emergency remote education has become the main educational strategy for students around the world to guarantee their continuity of studies at all levels. This leads to the use of totally remote teaching solutions in education where technology plays a leading role; and therefore, teachers become digital literacy teachers. The objective of this study is to inquire about the perceptions of the uses of ICT by early education teachers in private institutions in Lima within early education during emergency remote education in order to collect data and experiences of teachers to thus, to know the perceptions; the use that was given to ICTs; in the same way as the processes and challenges they went through during that context. The interviews carried out were analyzed through a thematic analysis and the results of these indicated that despite the challenges and limitations presented by the context of the pandemic and by the educational center itself, ICTs have positive consequences for students and teachers. Initial education. / Tess

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