Return to search

Technology Use as Transformative Pedagogy: Using Video Editing Technology to Learn About Teaching

Within the paradigm of Sociocultural Theory, and using Activity Theory as a data-gathering and management tool, this microgenetic case study examined the
processes - the growth, change, and development - engaged in by student-teachers in a foreign language education program as they worked together to complete an activity.
The activity involved digital video recording and editing, mediators which were intended
to facilitate the iterative review of and subsequent reflection and action upon the content of the video during its creation.
By investigating the process of contextual interaction between learners and the
mediational elements of their environment as the activity progressed, this study intended to further understanding of preservice teacher development in at least two important ways. The aims of this study were to discover a) tangible evidence of cognitive transformation (development in the form of regulation), as well as b) aspects of professionalization into a community of skilled second language teachers (as evidenced by activity).
The present study took place in a graduate-level foreign language/TESOL
education practicum course. The activity involved the making of a digital video to
explain and exemplify a given second language instructional approach, as well as the
rationale behind and methods of targeting a specific language skill. Using theoretical
constructs previously shown to be effective in the pedagogy of teacher preparation, the
creators of this task endeavored to design a socially- and artifact-mediated activity with the potential to broaden and deepen student-teachers' pedagogical and professional
knowledge.
The student-teachers failed to engage in meaningful dialogical or critical reflection as they engaged in the task, and made no perceptible regulative movement.
What ultimately was revealed in the case of the study participants was a disconnect
between the intentions of the core-task designers and the outcomes effected by the
student-teachers. The data gleaned from this close examination of student-teacher
processes was revelatory in terms of the quantity and types of factors that appeared to
significantly impact the outcomes of the project. These factors have the potential to
inform the process of translating socio-cultural theory into pedagogical practice, and should be of interest to anyone involved in the development of student-teachers, including those who design or deliver preservice teacher curricula.
Discussed are the possible explanations for the disconnect between the designers
and administrators of the activity and the participants in the study. Also considered are
the potentially serious implications for second language teacher education programs and their curricula in terms of the application of sociocultural constructs to learning tasks and environments.
Recommendations include increased scaffolding by the course professor through
direct guidance, as well as by structuring tasks to facilitate students' ability to collaborate and to perceive and resolve the conflicts, contradictions, and tensions that arise during the course of the activity. On a broader level, serious examinations of teacher education programs and curricula are also recommended to look for ways to better understand, align, and achieve the goals of teacher developers and those of their student-teachers.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:USF/oai:scholarcommons.usf.edu:etd-4422
Date01 January 2011
CreatorsMacy, Michelle
PublisherScholar Commons
Source SetsUniversity of South Flordia
Detected LanguageEnglish
Typetext
Formatapplication/pdf
SourceGraduate Theses and Dissertations
Rightsdefault

Page generated in 0.0021 seconds