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Language teacher education and development: learning teaching

Language teacher education and development: learning teaching. Chapter 9. Methods of teacher preparation. Micro-teaching. micro in the sense of using a small class,. and micro also in the sense of using a small. segment of a lesson , to practise a subset of classroom.

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Language teacher education and development: learning teaching

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  1. Language teacher education and development: learning teaching Chapter 9

  2. Methods of teacher preparation. Micro-teaching micro in the sense of using a small class, and micro also in the sense of using a small segment of a lesson , to practise a subset of classroom it is usually practised in four stages:

  3. 1-briefing 2-teach 3-critique 4-re-teach it depended on an analysis of lessons into observable and teachable behaviours or sub-skills which could be practised discretely.

  4. there are a number of modes of operating as a supervisor to help the student obtain maximum benefit. these were: 1-Directive supervision: the supervisor observes a lesson or part of a lesson and on the basis of their own beliefs and experience, suggests areas where the student could do things differently. 2-alternative supervision: here, the supervisor gets the student to describe what occurred in the classroom and attempts to present alternatives to lead the student to a rational decision.

  5. 3-collaborative supervision the supervisor shares the decision making and the evaluation, sometime asking the student teacher to write an account of the lesson just taught which is then discussed. This is sometimes called ' clinical supervision'. 4-non-directive supervision: this is based on an 'understanding response'. some trainees may respond to this positively but some may find that the pressure to self-criticize with the help of the supervisor provokes anxiety. 5-creative supervision: there are many possibilities for creativity, including peer observation and discussion, and the use of systematic

  6. observation schedules as a metalanguage for discussing teaching and the progress of the lesson. 6- self-help,or exploratory supervision: this was developed to find ways of stimulating student teachers to ' see things differently'. and develop new perspectives on their teaching through the teaching practice experience. 'clinical' supervision means the three-stage process of systematically observing, analysing, and evaluating teaching, in an 'ongoing process of teacher development'.

  7. Training the trainers Extensive education programmedeveloped for training supervisors in observation techniques associated with clinical rather than traditional, evaluative supervision, using a non-evaluative method and features of workshop discussion, classroom observation forms and checklists, meetings, and post-observation discussion.

  8. Research on teacher development • There are questions arised in these researches:- • 1-What kinds of experiences make teachers typically feel they have learnt something useful themselves? • 2-Can self-observation in some rigorous way show teachers something they would not have believed of themselves? • 3-Can teachers usefully engage in research, and what is the benefit? • 4-How do teachers make their decisions? • 5-Can teacher development proceed in isolation, or is some form of collaboration necessary? • 6-What can information about experienced teachers’ learning tell us about? • Methods in the classroom • Use of resources • Teacher preparation?

  9. Critical incidents The experience of some kind of ‘critical incident’ enables the learner to change their approach, sometimes in major ways, and draw benefit.

  10. Diary studies • Using teacher diaries or ‘records’ promotes reflection. The reflections largely focused on the benefits the teachers saw in the content of the INSET course. Three types are identified : • 1-solving problems, in which problem areas from home were given a new look through work on the course. • 2-seeing new ideas, in which the teachers reflected on new teaching to take home. • 3-legitimizing their own practice, in which the teachers found justification from the INSET course for practices they had adopted in their classrooms without really being able to articulate why.

  11. Action research • Teacher- research is sometimes seen as a purely developmental exercise. Action research has been criticized as a model for teacher research because of its rather time-consuming. An obvious benefit is the increased commitment and professionalism of the teachers involved and a change in our understanding of how teachers work within the changing constraints.

  12. Observation • The major systematic observation schedules were developed for supervisors to be able to base their feedback to students on some form of of empirical data rather than just impression.

  13. Teacher cognitions • Woods (1996) presents a book-length study of teacher cognition, by which he means ‘an’ integrated network of beliefs, assumptions and knowledge (BAK) underlying teachers’ interpretative processes. How they use their BAK in interpreting incidents in their classrooms and in making decisions affecting those classrooms, both in planning and in immediate action.

  14. Language and the language teacher In order to teach anything, the teacher must have a degree of mastery over the subject matter. Simply being a native speaker is no qualification for teaching the language. There are many issues in this argument. One issue is the relative value of proficiency in the language compared to teaching skill. Anotherissue is the degree of linguistic knowledge about the language possessed; often, non-native teachers have very good levels of theoretical knowledge, having studied the language academically, and some native speakers have not. A third issue is the desirability of the bi-lingual teacher. A fourth issue is the breadth of experience.

  15. Presented by : • منى محمد الصاعدي. • هناء واصل الوافي. • فوزية محمد المالكي. • فوزية عبد الخالق الزاهراني. • رابع .. • G (B)

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