Publication | Closed Access
We Taught Them about Literacy but What Did They Learn? The impact of a preservice teacher education program on the practices of beginning teachers
61
Citations
15
References
2008
Year
Pre-service Teacher EducationTeacher EducationPreservice ProgramLiteracy InstructionLiteracy TeachingEducationLiteracyLiteracy DevelopmentLiteracy LearningTeacher DevelopmentLiteracy ProgramTeacher PreparationLiteracy PracticePre-service PreparationElementary Education
This article reports a study of literacy instruction in our own elementary preservice program. It examines the views and practices of both the preservice faculty who teach literacy and a sample of graduates of the program during their first three years of teaching. The new teachers reported learning many things from their preservice program, including the importance of engaging learners, strategies for developing an inclusive class community, the names of high-quality works of children's literature, and a variety of general teaching strategies. However, there were gaps between what was taught and what the new teachers wanted to learn. The new teachers struggled with program planning, desired more direct instruction on developing a literacy program, and wanted closer links between theory and practice. The teacher educators tried to cover so much material that the new teachers were unable to develop a focused, coherent pedagogy. The authors describe how they are revising their courses in light of these findings, modifying their approach to preservice instruction, and giving priority to certain key aspects of teaching.
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