Publication | Open Access
Optimizing Education: A Mixed Methods Approach Oriented to Teaching Personal and Social Responsibility (TPSR)
50
Citations
39
References
2019
Year
Educational PsychologyEducationTeaching MethodTeacher EducationPolar Coordinate AnalysisMixed Method ApproachInclusive EducationClassroom Management StrategyTeacher DevelopmentClassroom PracticeBehavioral SciencesTeaching PersonalCurriculum DevelopmentMixed Methods ApproachEducational PracticeCurriculum & InstructionTeacher AttitudesSpecial EducationProfessional DevelopmentTpsr StrategiesSocial ResponsibilityEducational Theory
This methodological article provides a Mixed Method approach to analyze how the Teaching Personal and Social Responsibility (TPSR) Model is feasible to enhance student's autonomy. The objective is to detect how teachers' behavior-oriented patterns shift in response to continuing professional development to reinforce TPSR strategies. We compared the application of TPSR by three teachers who had previously attended a training course for this model, with that of an expert in the model. A total of 44 sessions of primary and secondary school semesters in various subjects, taught by all four teachers and comprising 120 students. A mixed-method approach followed in the study involved: (a) the Observational System of Teaching Oriented Responsibility (OSTOR), which revealed how the teachers' behavior patterns shifted over their interventions, and (b) the Tool for Assessing Responsibility-Based Education (TARE 2.0.), which focused on perceived behaviors by teachers and student behaviors. Data analysis was conducted for (a) the T-pattern detection technique, (b) polar coordinate analysis to obtain detailed sequences of instruction, and (c) descriptive and correlational analysis from the TARE. The mixed-method analysis of data confirms how the TPSR improved the teaching behaviors of the three teachers in training compared with the expert teacher.
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