Author:
Angelini Maria Laura,Álvarez Neus
Abstract
Purpose
The purpose of this paper is to examine the perceptions of pre-service teachers (PSTs) who used lesson study on a five-week school-based teaching placement. The paper analyses 12 undergraduate PSTs’ perceptions of the way lesson study affected classroom-based teaching of English as a foreign language to pre-school and primary school.
Design/methodology/approach
A qualitative study is carried out from the responses to a semi-structured interview to the PSTs, and written responses to the open-ended question: What are your perceptions of lesson study?
Findings
This paper provides empirical insights about the way lesson study reinforced the PSTs’ classroom management and lesson planning skills. The case-pupils’ responses to the PSTs’ questions post-treatment indicated that games and active techniques in the classroom led to high retention of the taught content. Nevertheless, PSTs’ evaluations of pupils’ learning outcomes require further development. These evaluations often resulted in vague perceptions of overall lesson performance.
Research limitations/implications
This study provides hints of how case-pupils better learned and how PSTs did the observations and performed. However, the results cannot be generalized.
Originality/value
The researchers sustain that the teaching degrees should encourage critical thinking in PSTs’ self-evaluations to reduce the focus on standards and expectations. It is believed that if the pressure of designing perfect lessons is removed from the equation, and instead, sensible and realistic lessons are planned, PSTs will be more inclined to learn and respond resourcefully, creatively, and resolutely to classroom situations.
Reference63 articles.
1. Lesson study puts a collaborative lens on student learning;Tools for Schools,2011
2. Cooperative games: a way to modify aggressive and cooperative behaviors in young children;Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis,1994
3. Cajkler, W. and Wood, P. (2014), “Lesson study in initial teacher education” in Dudley, P. (Ed.), Lesson Study: Professional Learning for Our Time, Routledge, London, pp. 107-127.
4. Calderhead, J. and Gates, P. (Eds) (2003), Conceptualising Reflection in Teacher Development, Routledge.
Cited by
12 articles.
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