Building teachers’ voices on teaching in a research-informed teaching course
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Publication date
2022ISSN
1360-0540
Abstract
This study aims to understand the extent to which 56 teachers
developed new academic-based voices about teaching in the context
of a research-informed teaching course. The empirical evidence
consisted of a set of 228 short reports written by participants on the
course. Each report reflects a fragment of knowledge acquired by a
teacher and includes four sections: the source of research information,
the verbatim text extracted from research, its perceived usefulness,
and the type of curriculum content. Each written report was
considered a thematic unit of analysis, and data were analysed with
qualitative and quantitative methods. Findings showed a wide
variety of sources and features of academic information acquired
by teachers, teachers’ differing purposes in using this information,
and various curriculum-related contents. The findings also revealed
three main types of teachers’ academic-based voices, which we
have labelled theory-informed voice, practice-informed voice, and
educational-tool-informed voice. The study demonstrates that each
teachers’ voice was distinctly used in each identified curriculum
content.
Document Type
Article
Document version
Published version
Language
English
Subject (CDU)
378 - Higher education. Universities. Academic study
Keywords
Pages
14 p.
Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Is part of
Journal of Education for Teaching, 48 (3), 274-286
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