专业视力支持的信号提示和重点提示:在职教师视频分析中教学设计与情境兴趣的相互作用

IF 2.6 3区 教育学 Q1 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH Instructional Science Pub Date : 2024-05-02 DOI:10.1007/s11251-024-09662-y
Meg Farrell, Monika Martin, Ricardo Böheim, Alexander Renkl, Werner Rieß, Karen D. Könings, Jeroen J. G. van Merriënboer, Tina Seidel
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在师范教育中,教学实践的视频展示为将概念性教学知识应用于现实环境提供了一种激励手段。通过视频分析,职前教师可以通过注意和推理所呈现的核心教学实践,开始培养专业视野技能。然而,由于新手的先前知识和经验有限,处理视频中的瞬时信息可能具有挑战性。多媒体学习研究提出了一些教学设计技巧来提供支持,如在观看视频时发出关键词提示,或在分析视频时针对理论知识的应用提出有针对性的自我解释提示。本研究调查了 130 名参加小组教学核心实践视频分析培训的职前教师的注意和推理(操作化为对相关注意事件的描述和解释)专业视力技能。通过实验比较,我们考察了信号提示和重点自我解释提示对专业视力表现的影响。此外,考虑到职前教师的情境兴趣,我们还探讨了这些技术的影响。总体而言,结果表明,从测试前到测试后,职前教师的专业视力技能有所提高,但教学设计技术总体上并未提供额外的支持。不过,调节分析表明,对于情境兴趣较低的职前教师来说,有提示的培训能促进其专业视力技能的提高。这表明,对于缺乏兴趣的新手来说,信号提示可能会弥补通常与情境兴趣相关的生成处理促进作用。研究和实践的意义在于将情境兴趣作为教学设计的一个强有力的组成部分,当兴趣难以激发时,关键词提示可以提供一种替代方法。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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Signaling cues and focused prompts for professional vision support: The interplay of instructional design and situational interest in preservice teachers’ video analysis

In teacher education, video representations of practice offer a motivating means for applying conceptual teaching knowledge toward real-world settings. With video analysis, preservice teachers can begin cultivating professional vision skills through noticing and reasoning about presented core teaching practices. However, with novices’ limited prior knowledge and experience, processing transient information from video can be challenging. Multimedia learning research suggests instructional design techniques for support, such as signaling keyword cues during video viewing, or presenting focused self-explanation prompts which target theoretical knowledge application during video analysis. This study investigates the professional vision skills of noticing and reasoning (operationalized as descriptions and interpretations of relevant noticed events) from 130 preservice teachers participating in a video-analysis training on the core practice of small-group instruction. By means of experimental comparisons, we examine the effects of signaling cues and focused self-explanation prompts on professional vision performance. Further, we explore the impact of these techniques, considering preservice teachers’ situational interest. Overall, results demonstrated that preservice teachers’ professional vision skills improved from pretest to posttest, but the instructional design techniques did not generally offer additional support. However, moderation analysis indicated that training with cues fostered professional vision skills for preservice teachers with low situational interest. This suggests that for uninterested novices, signaling cues may compensate for the generative processing boost typically associated with situational interest. Research and practice implications involve the consideration of situational interest as a powerful component of instructional design, and that keyword cueing can offer an alternative when interest is difficult to elicit.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.80
自引率
4.00%
发文量
35
期刊介绍: Instructional Science, An International Journal of the Learning Sciences, promotes a deeper understanding of the nature, theory, and practice of learning and of environments in which learning occurs. The journal’s conception of learning, as well as of instruction, is broad, recognizing that there are many ways to stimulate and support learning. The journal encourages submission of research papers, covering a variety of perspectives from the learning sciences and learning, by people of all ages, in all areas of the curriculum, in technologically rich or lean environments, and in informal and formal learning contexts. Emphasizing reports of original empirical research, the journal provides space for full and detailed reporting of major studies. Regardless of the topic, papers published in the journal all make an explicit contribution to the science of learning and instruction by drawing out the implications for the design and implementation of learning environments. We particularly encourage the submission of papers that highlight the interaction between learning processes and learning environments, focus on meaningful learning, and recognize the role of context. Papers are characterized by methodological variety that ranges, for example, from experimental studies in laboratory settings, to qualitative studies, to design-based research in authentic learning settings.  The Editors will occasionally invite experts to write a review article on an important topic in the field.  When review articles are considered for publication, they must deal with central issues in the domain of learning and learning environments. The journal accepts replication studies. Such a study should replicate an important and seminal finding in the field, from a study which was originally conducted by a different research group. Most years, Instructional Science publishes a guest-edited thematic special issue on a topic central to the journal''s scope. Proposals for special issues can be sent to the Editor-in-Chief. Proposals will be discussed in Spring and Fall of each year, and the proposers will be notified afterwards.  To be considered for the Spring and Fall discussion, proposals should be sent to the Editor-in-Chief by March 1 and October 1, respectively.  Please note that articles that are submitted for a special issue will follow the same review process as regular articles.
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