表现是不够的:异步、脚本化在线学习环境中的教师身份和自由裁量权

Jennifer Darling-Aduana, Kristin Hemingway
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引用次数: 1

摘要

背景/背景:学校越来越多地使用限制教师自主权的脚本课程。当脚本课程在完全标准化的异步在线课程环境中实施,没有师生交流机制时,这些限制就会加剧。目的:本研究扩展了对教师自由裁量权、身份认同以及两者之间的关系如何影响学生在线教育体验的理解。研究设计:在顺序混合方法设计中,我们使用批判性话语分析确定教师自由裁量的空间。通过编写课程记录,我们开发了一种常见策略的类型:友好型,指导性,个性化和程序性。我们使用所得到的类型学来运行统计模型,检查教师身份、自由裁量行为和学生成绩之间的联系。最后,我们回到定性数据,以确认发现,测试假设,并提供细微差别。研究发现:黑人教师更倾向于使用程序性方法,而不太可能使用友好策略。当老师使用个性化策略(如分享相关的个人经历)时,学生在课后测验中得分较高,而当老师使用友好或指导性策略时,学生得分较低。结论:研究结果对在异步、脚本化的在线环境中理解和制定公平的教育实践具有启示意义。所研究的虚拟学习环境中可行的自由裁量行为的隔离有助于了解教师自由裁量权可能导致少数群体学生获得更有利学习结果的机制。
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Representation Is Not Enough: Teacher Identity and Discretion in an Asynchronous, Scripted Online Learning Environment
Background/Context: Schools are increasingly using scripted curricula that limit teacher autonomy. These limitations are exacerbated when scripted curricula are enacted in fully standardized, asynchronous online course environments with no mechanisms for student–teacher communication. Purpose: This study extends understanding of how teacher discretion, identity, and the relationship between those two components shape students’ educational experiences online. Research Design: Within a sequential mixed method design, we identified spaces for teacher discretion using critical discourse analysis. By coding lesson transcripts, we developed a typology of common strategies: friendly, directive, personalized, and procedural. We used the resulting typology to run statistical models examining associations among teacher identity, discretionary acts, and student achievement. Lastly, we turned back to the qualitative data to confirm findings, test hypotheses, and provide nuance. Findings: Teachers presenting as Black were significantly more likely to use a procedural approach and significantly less likely to use friendly strategies. Students scored higher on their end-of-lesson quiz when their teacher used personalized strategies, such as sharing relevant personal experiences, and scored lower when teachers used friendly or directive strategies. Conclusions: Findings have implications for understanding and enacting equitable educational practices in asynchronous, scripted online environments. The isolation of discretionary acts feasible within the virtual learning environment studied contributes nuance to knowledge of the mechanisms through which teacher discretion might result in more favorable learning outcomes for students belonging to minoritized groups.
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