The Affective Domain—A Program to Foster Social-Emotional Orientation in Novice Physical Education Teachers
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methods
2.1. Participants
2.2. Instrumentations
2.3. Procedure
- (1)
- Documentation of a challenging teaching event focusing on body sensation. This part had several activities: (a) The participants’ home assignment was to document a challenging event that they encounter in their teaching; (b) in class, they had to report emotions, body sensations, and thoughts; (c) in the same lesson, they were divided into groups of four people—the teller described his/her event to another participant in the group; the listener, who was instructed to listen with no comments, while the other two people—the photographers, filmed the listener and the teller, each one from a different angle; (d) the group observed the video clips and each member added details that he/she thought would be significant for their first documentation; (e) the participants were asked to rank the following three aspects: emotions, body sensations, and thoughts, according to their dominant appearance.
- (2)
- Body sensations, emotions, and thoughts. In the next lesson, the TPs were divided into three groups based on the dominant aspect that they recognized in their own documentation—emotions, body sensations, or thoughts. Their assignment was to express verbally, as well as non-verbally, the dominant aspect of their group, using photographic art material. By integrating these three aspects, that is, emotions, body sensations, and thoughts, we aimed to arrive at a holistic perception of a challenging event.
- (3)
- Documentation of a challenging dialogue of a teacher and student, focusing on group activities by verbal and non-verbal means. The TPs chose two photographs of trees, metaphorically representing a teacher and a student. Using these two pictures they created a poster symbolizing a challenging dialogue between them.
- (4)
- Reflective observation. (a) The TPs wrote down the challenging dialogue that emerged from the previous activity; (b) in the next activity, which was filmed, this dialogue was used as a scenario for a simulation between a teacher and student.
- (5)
- An analysis of the challenging dialogue in teaching, focusing on practical insights. The TPs watched the video clip twice. The first time, they observed the simulation and documented the body sensations, emotions, and thoughts, and the second time, they observed the video clip on mute mode and wrote a dialogue for this challenging event; these two activities were then discussed in class for developing practical implications.
- (6)
- Integrative reflection. The novice teachers were required to fill out and submit a short feedback form relating to their perceptions about the course’s contribution to their professional development. Some of the questions were “What were the meaningful issues in the course?”, “How do you perceive the course activities’ impact on you?”, and “Can you provide any feedback or suggestions?”.
2.4. Data Analysis
2.5. Trustworthiness
3. Results
“I feel so confused. I am trying to explain, but all of the students are talking together, there is so much noise that I cannot hear anyone, and not give any feedback… I am in a panic.”
“Because I think all the time about what I have done wrong, and how to change, I feel restless and impatient”.
“I know that I am disappointed and angry about my students, but with a deep breath and patience things will get better.”
“What do they want from us?”
“What one sees from one point cannot be seen from another place”, “you and I are gonna change the world”, “give me and I will give you”, “we are together all the way”, “educate the child according to his/her own path”, tomorrow is a new day.”
“At the end of the lesson, we both will stay together and talk.”
“Come over here! Relax!”
“Stand on the side of the room”,
“At the end of the lesson, we will discuss it again.”
“Oh, I don’t want us to watch it... it is embarrassing … no don’t screen mine.”
“You should look at his eyes...”, “look how you hold your hand…”, “how about trying a different approach…”, “look at the child…”, “how about talking to him in a different manner …”
“When we were student teachers, we were mostly occupied with pedagogical content knowledge and with content knowledge; the learners’ feelings were seldom discussed. So, I have not invested time towards this aspect. Actually, I think this aspect is the basis for learning and communicating.”
“They hated to run. Eventually, I understood that in order to motivate them, I should be smart rather than getting angry at them, and turn their hate into love.”
“I know that I want to see happy children with self-confidence, therefore I spend a lot of time with my mentor and on the Internet to find suitable activities. I understand this better now than ever before.”
4. Discussion
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Workshop Stages and Teaching Issues | Instruments | Data Collected |
---|---|---|
Documentation—of a challenging teaching event focusing on body sensation, emotions, and thoughts | Reflective tasks | Descriptions of body sensation, emotions, and thoughts |
Documentation—of a challenging dialogue of a teacher and student focusing on group activities | Art creations | Verbal and visual means |
Reflection—on the challenging dialogue based on art activities, focusing on metaphors | Written assignments relating to still photographic observations | Metaphors |
Reflective observation—of the challenging dialogue, focusing on video | Videos | Short films |
Analysis—of the challenging dialogue in teaching, focused on practical insights | Individual reflective task | Practical implications drawn from the workshop analysis |
Integrative reflection—student teachers’ feedback, practical awareness, insights development, and practical conclusions to implement in practice | Summary reflection | Integrating personal and group reflections |
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Zach, S.; Rosenblum, H. The Affective Domain—A Program to Foster Social-Emotional Orientation in Novice Physical Education Teachers. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2021, 18, 7434. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18147434
Zach S, Rosenblum H. The Affective Domain—A Program to Foster Social-Emotional Orientation in Novice Physical Education Teachers. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2021; 18(14):7434. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18147434
Chicago/Turabian StyleZach, Sima, and Hily Rosenblum. 2021. "The Affective Domain—A Program to Foster Social-Emotional Orientation in Novice Physical Education Teachers" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 18, no. 14: 7434. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18147434
APA StyleZach, S., & Rosenblum, H. (2021). The Affective Domain—A Program to Foster Social-Emotional Orientation in Novice Physical Education Teachers. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 18(14), 7434. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18147434