COVID-19 全球大流行病动荡:美国职业技术教育教师的应对措施

Q4 Social Sciences Athens Journal of Education Pub Date : 2024-07-19 DOI:10.30958/aje.11-3-1
John Cannon, Mary Self, Allen Kitchel, Sally Arnett-Hartwick, Carol Billing, Kevin Elliott, Michelle Bartlett, Mari Borr, Jeremy Jeffery
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引用次数: 0

摘要

受 COVID-19 大流行病的影响,美国和世界其他国家的日常生活受到了前所未有的破坏。几乎每个人都经历了某种程度的 "居家令",由此造成的经济灾难超过了 2008 年的大衰退,与近一个世纪前的大萧条不相上下。幼儿园到 12 年级的教育机构和中学后教育机构也未能幸免,许多学校从 3 月中旬到 2020 学年结束一直停课。许多学校将课程转移到远程教学平台。职业技术教育(CTE)教师的任务是为在实践情境学习环境中教授的课程创造性地开展在线学习活动。本文将介绍一个由来自全美各地的九位研究人员组成的合作小组所开展的研究的初步结果,他们在职业技术教育方面总共拥有 200 多年的经验。这项研究采用的概念框架是丹尼尔森的教学与提高专业实践框架和包括建构主义在内的职业技术教育基础。来自美国 50 个州的 3267 名参与者回答了 37 个项目的调查。研究目标包括对参与者的描述,以及当学校关闭、教学转移到远程/远距离/在线平台时,职业技术教育内容的规划和实施所面临的挑战。参与者对他们作为教师所面临的挑战以及他们对学生所经历的挑战的看法进行了排名。职业技术教育教师认为,在网上复制教室或实验室环境以及缺乏网上教学经验是他们面临的最大挑战。学员们认为,学生面临的挑战包括引导和管理自己学习的积极性,以及学生能否获得可靠的网络连接。COVID-19 大流行病的出现和流行给教育实践增加了一层复杂性,而这是没有预见到的,也是没有刻意准备的。了解职业技术教育的教师和指导者如何响应这一号召,以及他们和他们的学生所遇到的挑战,对于努力改进未来的实践,以及在发生另一场危机迫使学习以传统的面对面课堂以外的其他形式进行时处于更有利的位置,都是非常重要的。关键词COVID-19、职业技术教育、远程学习
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COVID-19 Global Pandemic Upheaval: CTE Teachers Response in the United States
The United States along with the rest of the world has experienced an unprecedented disruption in daily life due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Almost everyone has experienced some sort of stay at home order resulting in an economic catastrophe greater than the Great Recession of 2008 and on par with the Great Depression almost a century ago. Educational institutions at both the K-12 and post-secondary levels have not been immune from the shutdown, with many schools closed from mid-March through the end of the 2020 school year. Many schools moved classes to remote, distance delivery platforms. Career and Technical Education (CTE) teachers were tasked with creative engaging learning activities online for curricula which is taught in a hands-on contextual learning environment. This paper will present preliminary results from research conducted by a collaborative group of nine researchers from across the United States with collectively over 200 years of career and technical education experience. The conceptual framework used for this study was Danielson’s Framework for Teaching and Enhancing Professional Practice and Foundations of Career and Technical Education including Constructivism. 3,267 participants representing all 50 states responded to the 37-item survey. The research objectives included description of participants and identified challenges to planning and delivery of CTE content when schools were closed, and instruction was moved to remote/distance/online platforms. Participants ranked their challenges as instructors and their perceptions of challenges that were experienced by their students. CTE teachers ranked replicating classroom or lab environments online and lack of experience teaching online as their biggest challenges. The perceptions of the participants concerning challenges for their students included motivation to guide and manage their own learning and students’ access to reliable internet connection. The emergence and prevalence of the COVID-19 pandemic added a layer of complexity to educational practice that was not foreseen and for which no intentional preparation had occurred. Understanding how CTE teachers and instructors responded to this call, and the challenges they and their students encountered, is important to efforts to improve practice in the future and to be in a better position should another crisis occur that forces learning to be delivered in alternative formats from that of the traditional face-to-face classroom. Keywords: COVID-19, career and technical education, remote learning
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来源期刊
Athens Journal of Education
Athens Journal of Education Social Sciences-Education
CiteScore
1.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
33
审稿时长
24 weeks
期刊最新文献
Fostering Students' Active Participation in Higher Education: The Role of Teacher-student Rapport Metacognitive Strategies and Tendency to be Open to Learning: A Predictive Study Artificial Intelligence (AI) and its Potential Impact on the Future of Higher Education COVID-19 Global Pandemic Upheaval: CTE Teachers Response in the United States Supporting Distributed Learning through Immersive Learning Environments
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