Developing a cognitive theory from student teachers post-lesson reflective dialogues on secondary school mathematics

Resource type
Journal Article
Authors/contributors
Title
Developing a cognitive theory from student teachers post-lesson reflective dialogues on secondary school mathematics
Abstract
This article describes phases of post-lessn reflective dialogues that were enacted by secondary school mathematics student teachers with their peers. Five pairs of student teachers on 12 weeks of teaching practice provided data through lesson assessments, post-lesson reflective dialogues, and end-of-teaching-practice reflective interviews. A cognitive theory of collaborative reflection with a peer that encapsulates phase characteristics of a post-lesson reflective dialogue is proposed. Dialogue at each of the phases of the theory may not easily change student teachers' conceptions of teaching, but could provide a platform and structure for reviewing, modifying, or even maintaining teaching cognitions. While the older and more familiar 'apprenticeship' models are based on an expert teacher coaching a novice student teacher instructional skills, this fresh 'social' model is based on novice student teachers and their peers coaching each other teaching skills. An important implication of this observation is that current discourse on strategies for improving the quality of student teaching may move towards a consideration for a fresh school attachment model. 2011 EASA.
Date
2011
Language
English
Loc. in Archive
Nyaumwe, L.J., Mtetwa, D.K., 2011. Developing a cognitive theory from student teachers post-lesson reflective dialogues on secondary school mathematics. South African Journal of Education 31, 145159.
Citation
Nyaumwe, L. J., & Mtetwa, D. K. (2011). Developing a cognitive theory from student teachers post-lesson reflective dialogues on secondary school mathematics (Nyaumwe, L.J., Mtetwa, D.K., 2011. Developing a cognitive theory from student teachers post-lesson reflective dialogues on secondary school mathematics. South African Journal of Education 31, 145159.). https://doi.org/10.15700/saje.v31n1a406
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