The last couple of days, two articles with a focus on using video as a tool for teacher learning and development have been published in Journal of Mathematics Teaching Education. The first articleinvestigates how prospective primary mathematics teachers might learn from on-line discussions.
Prospective primary mathematics teachers’ learning from on-line discussions in a virtual video-based environment
Journal Journal of Mathematics Teacher Education
Publisher Springer Netherlands
ISSN 1386-4416 (Print) 1573-1820 (Online)
DOI 10.1007/s10857-009-9133-0
SpringerLink Date Wednesday, November 18, 2009
By Salvador Llinares and Julia Valls
Abstract The aim of this study was to investigate how participation and reification of ideas about mathematics teaching are constituted in on-line discussions when prospective primary mathematics teachers analysed video-cases about mathematics teaching. Prospective teachers enrolled in a mathematics methodology course participated for 4 weeks in two virtual learning environments that integrated the analysis of video-clips, on-line discussions and writing essays about key aspects of mathematics teaching. Three aspects were considered relevant to explain the prospective teachers’ learning: the way in which the theoretical information was used to frame and to interpret the events from mathematics teaching; the characteristics of engagement with others participating in the on-line discussions and the role played by prospective teachers’ beliefs. Possible reasons for the importance of these features include the specific questions posed in on-line discussions and the use of video-clips of mathematics teaching. These findings are considered useful in designing virtual learning environments and the kinds of tasks through which the understanding of mathematics teaching and learning-to-notice skills can be developed.
The other article also has a focus on using videos, by the use of so called "video clubs".
The influence of video clubs on teachers’ thinking and practice
Journal Journal of Mathematics Teacher Education
Publisher Springer Netherlands
ISSN 1386-4416 (Print) 1573-1820 (Online)
DOI 10.1007/s10857-009-9130-3
SpringerLink Date Saturday, November 14, 2009
By Elizabeth A. van Es and Miriam Gamoran Sherin
Abstract This article examines a model of professional development called “video clubs” in which teachers watch and discuss excerpts of videos from their classrooms. We investigate how participation in a video club influences teachers’ thinking and practice by exploring three related contexts: (a) teachers’ comments during video-club meetings, (b) teachers’ self-reports of the effects of the video club, and (c) teachers’ instruction across the year. Data analysis revealed changes in all three contexts. In the video-club meetings, teachers paid increased attention to student mathematical thinking over the course of the year. In interviews, teachers reported having learned about students’ mathematical thinking, about the importance of attending to student ideas during instruction, and about their school’s mathematics curriculum. Finally, shifts were also uncovered in the teachers’ instruction. By the end of the year, teachers increasingly made space for student thinking to emerge in the classroom, probed students’ underlying understandings, and learned from their students while teaching.
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