Theorising Teaching and Learning: Pre-service Teachers’ Theoretical Awareness of Learning

From Section:
Preservice Teachers
Published:
Feb. 15, 2015

Source: European Journal of Teacher Education, Volume 38, Issue 1, 2015, pages 102-118.

The authors examine pre-service teachers’ theoretical learning during one five-week training module, and their educators’ learning about better lecture design to foster student learning.

The participants were 79 students from year three of a teacher training programme, studied the variation theory (VT) of learning.
The study is iterative: interventions (one per group) were implemented sequentially in student groups A–C, the results of the previous intervention serving as the baseline for the design developed for the next.
Three lesson cycles were completed, each comprising four steps: (1) a pre-test, (2) a 15-min intervention discussing VT, (3) a post-test and (4) a delayed post-test conducted eight weeks later.

The findings indicated learning differences between groups; qualitative analysis identified three categories of student answers, i.e. emergent, premature and unaware, regarding their theoretical understanding.
Group C had more students with emergent knowledge (36%) than did groups A (20%) or B (17%) at post-testing.


Updated: Nov. 24, 2019
Keywords:
Intervention | Learning processes | Learning theories | Phenomenology | Preservice teachers | Student attitudes | Teacher education programs