A Comparison of Student Teachers' Beliefs from Four Different Science Teaching Domains Using a Mixed Methods Design
Résumé
The study presented in this paper integrates data from four combined research studies, which are both qualitative and quantitative nature. The studies describe freshman science student teachers' beliefs about teaching and learning. These freshmen intend to become teachers in Germany in one of four science teaching domains (secondary biology, chemistry and physics respectively, as well as primary school science). The qualitative data from the first study is based on student teachers' drawings of themselves in teaching situations. It was formulated using Grounded Theory to test three scales: beliefs about classroom organisation, beliefs about teaching objectives, and epistemological beliefs. Three further quantitative studies give insight into student teachers' curricular beliefs, their beliefs about the nature of science itself, and about the student- and/or teacher-centeredness of science teaching. This paper describes a design to integrate all these data within a Mixed Methods framework. The aim of the current study is to describe a broad, triangulated picture of freshman science student teachers' beliefs about teaching and learning within their respective science teaching domain. The study reveals clear tendencies between the sub-groups. The results suggest that freshman chemistry and - even more pronouncedly - freshman physics student teachers profess quite traditional beliefs about science teaching and learning. Biology and primary school student teachers express beliefs about their subjects which are more in line with modern educational theory. The Mixed Methods approach towards the student teachers beliefs is reflected upon and implications for science education and science teacher education are discussed.
Domaines
Education
Origine : Fichiers produits par l'(les) auteur(s)
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