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PRESERVICE TEACHERS’ ATTITUDES TOWARDS INDIVIDUALS WITH MENTAL HEALTH DISORDERSGilbert, Noah Aaron 24 April 2019 (has links)
No description available.
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Perspective Differences of Teacher Leadership in Teacher Education Undergraduate Curriculum: A Comparative Analysis of Pre-Service Physical Education Majors and Other Content AreasCarpenter, Christopher W. 09 June 2009 (has links)
No description available.
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Pre-Service Teachers’ Understandings of IsometriesClayton, Emanuel January 2020 (has links)
No description available.
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Data-Based Decision-Making in the Development of an RTI Certificate Program for Pre-Service TeachersHale, Kimberly D., Hudson, Tina 01 January 2016 (has links)
No description available.
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Investigating Pre-Service Teachers’ TPACK through Teacher Training Program at Saudi UniversitiesAlshawaf, Sahar Mohammed January 2020 (has links)
No description available.
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The Development of Prospective Primary School Science Teachers’ TPaCK Fostered by Innovative Science-Teacher EducationWollmann, Karl, Lange-Schubert, Kim 09 October 2023 (has links)
The EEdnaS study “Development and testing of digitally enriched science-related subject
matter teaching in digital teaching-learning labs and university classrooms” aims to promote the
professional competencies of prospective teachers that are needed for teaching science content
in a world shaped by digitalization. To achieve this goal, university teaching units (seminars)
that directly address cognitive components of a teacher’s professional competencies, which are
important to teaching science content in primary school education, were developed. In addition,
prospective teachers were asked to plan, implement, and evaluate primary school science education
with a particular focus on digitization, as well as sharing the developed units as open-educational
resources. This article reports on the impact of the first part of the seminar concept, in which the
promotion of digitization-related, subject-specific teaching methodology, as well as content-related
knowledge (TPaCK) was systematically promoted. In a standardized survey, it could be shown that
the prospective teachers demonstrated positive developments, particularly in the components PCK,
TCK, TPK, as well as TPaCK, regarding the self-efficacy in cognitive characteristics about one’s own
ability within the reference frame of self. Furthermore, the development of knowledge, especially in
the areas of TK, PCK, TCK, and TPK, could also be determined, but not in relation to TPaCK itself.
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In-service and Pre-service Teachers' Implicit Attitudes and Self-efficacy Beliefs Toward Teaching Racial Minority StudentsTan, Tiffany S 01 January 2020 (has links)
The racial dynamic between teachers and students in the United States is increasing. The population of racial minority students continues to grow while the teacher population stays predominantly White. Equity and inclusion, often the foreground in an educational setting, are now being undervalued when needed the most. This study examined and compared pre-service and in-service teachers' implicit attitudes toward racial minority students while also looking at their self-efficacy beliefs in teaching diverse classrooms. Participants included nine pre-service teachers from a four-year university and nine PreK-3 in-service teachers. All participants were from the Southeastern part of the United States. To test the hypothesis that pre-service teachers will have more negative implicit attitudes toward racial minority students, this study used an Implicit Association Test. Although the t-test result comparing both groups, pre-service teachers versus in-service teachers, showed insignificant differences, raw data from participants' Implicit Association Tests showed that more pre-service teachers showed a slight bias towards students from racial majority groups. Results support recommendations and implications for practitioners to better understand how biases may occur in classrooms and how pre-service teachers can be better prepared to teach in diverse classrooms.
Keywords: implicit attitudes, implicit bias, racial dynamics, racial minority students, early childhood education
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”Det är svårt att se den egna kompetensen” : en studie om hur en grupp lärarstudenter resonerar om relationskompetens med stöd av digital video / "It's difficult to discover your own skill." : a study ofhow a group of pre-service teachers reason about relational competence with the support of digital videoFinné Persson, Lisa January 2018 (has links)
The aim of this study, which is part of a research project called LÄRK at the University of Kristianstad, is to further examine how a group of pre-service teachers reason about relational competence, as well as examining their opinions regarding the importance of relational competence in the teaching profession. Furthermore, the study aims to investigate whether the project has had some kind of long term impact on the students’ ideas with regards to their way of reasoning about their pedagogical practice in stimulated recall interviews and how their understanding of their own relational competence may have been influenced by the process. The results show that the students have the conviction that relational competence is of great importance to the teaching profession and that good relationships based on trust and confidence are fundamental to learning. The results that have emerged also indicate that the students developed increased knowledge of relational competence and what distinguishes a teacher with relational competence. It is suggested that the students find it easier to apply a more general theoretical understanding of relational competence rather than engaging in a self-reflective analysis of their behavior in the recorded film sequences from VFU. It is likely that the project’s three educational sessions did not generate sufficient progression for students to develop a glimpse of the competencies that underlie the definition of relational competence. Although such an assumption supports the idea that relational competence should be initiated in an early stage in teacher education, the result indicates that more research is needed on the competence and how it should be implemented in teacher education.
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A Naturalistic Inquiry into Preservice Teachers' Experiences with Science, Technology, and Society (STS) Curricular ApproachesMakki, Nidaa 31 July 2008 (has links)
No description available.
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Developing Intercultural Sensitivity Through Immersion Experiences in Unfamiliar Cultural Milieux: Implications for Teacher Education and Professional DevelopmentPieski, Mary Kay Florence 26 August 2011 (has links)
No description available.
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