Using video in teacher education
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Using video in teacher education
(Advances in research on teaching : a research annual / editor, Jere Brophy)
Emerald, c2003
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Note
Includes bibliographical references
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This book features contribution from people who have developed and used video in teacher education. The focus is on video as opposed to other technology (e-mail, etc.) and its use in teacher education. The video can be stored on videotapes, CD-Rom, DVD, or computer drives, and it can be used in either preservice or inservice teacher education/professional development programs. Contributors explain the nature of the video they use in their teacher education programs or courses and talk about how they use it, focusing in particular on principles for: making the videos (decisions about how and what to capture on video, the degree to which the teaching should be scripted, whether it should be shown uninterrupted or segmented and edited, and so on), and principles for using the video in the teacher education program (why and how it is used at what points in the program, how viewings are structured and scaffolded by the teacher educator, and so on).
Table of Contents
List of contributors. Introduction (J. Brophy). New perspectives on the role of video in teacher education (M. Gamoran Sherin). Quality visions and focused imagination (T. Bliss, A. Reynolds). Using video to create a vision for powerful discussion teaching in secondary social studies (D.E. Hess). Designing and developing a video-case based interactive program for English language arts teacher preparation (L. Campbell Stephens). Videocases in elementary science teacher preparation (S.K. Abell, K.S. Cennamo). For the enrichment of practical knowledge: good practice and useful theory for future primary teachers (W. Oonk et al.). Designing a virtual K-2 classroom literacy tour: learning together as teachers explore "best practice" (C.L. Rosaen et al.). Linking on-line video and curriculum to leverage community knowledge (B.J. Fishman). Designing for teacher learning: video-based curriculum design (D.M. le Fevre). Using video as an object of inquiry for mathematics teaching and learning (N. Seago). Discussion (J. Brophy).
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