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Editor's Remarks
And Who Will Be Listening? (PDF,
2.5 MB, PDF Instructions)
Ann Thompson
Starting with this issue, JCTE is embarking on a new adventure in our
work to disseminate research to the teacher education community. At the
request of about 50 SIGTE members gathered at NECC 2006, we will
be podcasting one article from each issue, as well as the editors
column.
President's Message
Making a Difference (PDF,
544 KB, PDF Instructions)
Arlene Borthwick
On the first night of class this September, I asked my group of technology
in education graduate students to brainstorm a list of issues that they
were experiencing related to integrating technology in their K12
settings. They came up with more than 20 items, including local and state
budget; training; technical support; hardware/software access and compatibility;
awareness of and accountability for technology standards; perceptions
of importance of technology use by students, teachers, and administrators;
an already full curriculum; lack of teacher knowledge of how
technology can help students learn basic skills and higher order thinking
skills; and the generation gap (kids know more than teachers).
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Voices in Videoconferencing: Technology Integration in Teacher Education
Courses (PDF,
687 KB, PDF Instructions)
Katherine A. OConnor, Terry S. Atkinson, Melissa N. Matusevich,
H. Carol Greene, Carol Pope, and Amy J. Good
This manuscript describes the efforts of several instructors who incorporated
videoconferencing in their teacher education courses at two large universities
in the southeastern United States. Professors preparing teachers to teach
elementary and middle school examined their interactive videoconference
experiences linking preservice teachers with students in real classroom
settings. Three projects are described. The first project involved teleobservation
whereby professors co-taught with K6 classroom teachers while preservice
teachers observed. The second project focused on a middle-grades English
Language Arts professor whose preservice teachers observed middle school
students in real time. In the third project, a university professor served
as a live audience for an elementary Readers Theatre performance.
The lessons learned through the evaluation of these three projects are
discussed.
Exemplary
Technology-using Teachers: Perceptions of Factors Influencing Success
(PDF,
562 KB, PDF Instructions)
Peggy A. Ertmer, Anne Ottenbreit-Leftwich, and Cindy S. York
Exemplary technology-using teachers achieve meaningful technology use
in learner-centered, constructive environments despite the presence of
both internal and external barriers. In this study, we discuss factors
that enabled teachers to overcome these barriers, as identified by 25
winners of statewide technology teacher awards. In addition, we explored
teachers perceptions of the relative value of both intrinsic and
extrinsic factors that were perceived to play key roles in their success.
Using Distance Technology to Sustain Teacher Education for Student Teachers
in Isolated Areas: The Technology Supported Induction Network (PDF,
636KB, PDF Instructions)
Sara Winstead Fry and Carol Bryant
This qualitative study evaluated the Technology Supported Induction Networks
(TSIN) effect on 15 elementary education student teachers in isolated
rural schools. The student teachers were 50-300 miles away from their
university; thus, it was difficult for faculty to provide support and
supervision. The TSIN provided student teachers with professional development
opportunities and virtual connections to their peers and university through
distance technology, including an online discussion board and compressed
video. Findings indicate that the TSIN supported reflective practice,
curricular and emotional support, and connections to peers, but not connections
to the university. TSIN participants also developed their technology skills
and confidence. The strengths and limitations of using distance technology
to support student teachers are discussed along with recommendations for
improving the TSIN design.
Integrating Technology during Student Teaching: An Examination of Teacher
Work Samples (PDF,
595 KB, 73 seconds, PDF Instructions)
John E. Henning, Victoria L. Robinson, Mary Corwin Herring, and Terri
McDonald
This study examined the teacher work samples of 197 student teachers to
determine their level of technology integration during student teaching.
Findings indicated that most student teachers planned to use some kind
of technology, although only 40% planned to include computers and less
than 20% planned for the use of computers by students. The barriers to
technology integration were most often related to instruction (e.g., the
technology did not serve the learning goals and the technology was not
developmentally appropriate) rather than a lack of available resources
and time. These findings may be explained in part by the unique character
of the teacher work sample (TWS) data, which prompts student teachers
to report on their technology use during a single unit of instruction.
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