Embedding Active Pedagogies within Pre-Service Teacher Education: Implementation Considerations and Recommendations
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Conceptual and Theoretical Frameworks
2.1.1. RE-AIM
2.1.2. Participatory Action Research
2.1.3. Practice Architecture Theory
2.1.4. Sociocultural Theory (Peer Micro-Teaching)
2.2. Recruitment and Consent
2.3. Study Design
2.4. Data Collection
2.5. Data Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Participants
3.1.1. Stakeholders
3.1.2. Lecturers
3.1.3. Undergraduates (Pre-Service Teachers)
3.2. Quantitative Data
3.3. Qualitative Data
3.3.1. Reach
“To transform practice, you need to work with all levers across multiple systems, the broader the dissemination the greater the likelihood of change.”(Stakeholder 2)
“We need to identify a shared problem, and importantly identify this program as the shared solution to the problem. This generates buy-in right from the start.”(Stakeholder 1)
“The pre-service teachers really understood that these were such important skills for all teachers to learn–for classroom management, transitions, and overall effective teaching. They felt that it would help them become better in the classroom. Getting this information out there early and more widely is essential.”(Lecturer 5)
“I actually felt empowered by it [co-design] as I was gaining knowledge and building a resource bank—this meant I could disseminate the messaging more broadly, more widely and more consistently.”(Lecturer 1)
“The results speak for themselves. This is its selling point and how you will get it out there. It’s based on such sound evidence and then when you take this toolbox [active teaching strategies] and experiment first-hand with them, it is transferred immediately.”(Lecturer 2)
“I was able to include all the key concepts and resources in each session but as it is a very versatile program; I could adapt it as needed to reach the different cohorts.”(Lecturer 2)
“Exposure to other areas of the curriculum across the education faculties is essential, it needs to be incorporated into all subject areas within the universities.”(Lecturer 3)
3.3.2. Effectiveness
“All other measures of effectiveness are really just proxies. What we really need to show is transformed practice at a school level to improve student outcomes.”(Stakeholder 1)
“The health, wellbeing and educational outcomes of a student is the ultimate indicator of impact.”(Stakeholder 3)
“The pre-service teachers were not only learning about these strategies but they were experiencing them and experimenting with them. It was this practical and experiential learning that consolidated the theory.”(Lecturer 4)
“I think the pre-service teachers need to see how it works in practice. For this to become a real prospect for them they need to see it, be part of it and practice it. Without that integrated or embedded practice it may be hard for them to translate into their teaching when they are graduates. I think that is one of the best aspects of this program—its embedded across all aspect of the unit, lectures, seminars and assessment.”(Lecturer 4)
“I am a practising primary school teacher as well as a lecturer, so I was able to contribute a real-life perspective and make this applied. It was like connecting the research to practice and gave me real ownership as I was bringing in real life examples from my teaching.”(Lecturer 5)
“From a lecturer perspective it was observing their [pre-service teachers’] passion and drive grow over the unit; to be active teachers. They realised that there is no other way; this is the only way. For the pre-service teachers, it was the belief in themselves, realising that they can now do it with the skills that they have. They feel equipped with their new ‘teacher toolbox’ to be active classroom teachers.”(Lecturer 2)
“The lack of consistent exposure and dose of active breaks and active teaching across their course will be a challenge. This is the only unit across the entire degree that they are exposed to active teaching the lack of exposure may dilute the message. Also being in first year, they have such a long time before they are out teaching that they may forget the message.”(Lecturer 1)
“Although I was nervous that I would not have the skills and knowledge to be able to do so, as the unit progressed the excitement remained but the nerves went away as I was provided with many resources and examples of how to conduct physical education classes and involve physical activity into my classroom which made me feel a lot more confident.”(Pre-service teacher 1)
“My views, feelings and values that I possess surrounding the importance of physical activity levels have been reinforced and strengthened throughout. It has been extremely useful to learn ways in which to incorporate more activity into the generalist classroom. I have a significantly greater understanding of the value of active breaks and the integrated curriculum. I feel a lot more confident to deliver appropriate, active, fun lessons.”(Pre-service teacher 11)
“There are so many strategies that I have learnt from this program that I am going to include in my teaching, like including movement-based activities into normal lessons, which was not something that I would have thought about doing. I never realised that generalist teachers could do that sort of thing in their classroom, or even that they needed it. All these strategies that I have learnt are going to improve my teaching in many ways.”(Pre-service teacher 10)
3.3.3. Adoption
“Our primary purpose, our work here is to teach people, not just to teach content. We need to make the connection between teacher practice and student outcomes, regardless of content. By understanding this sole purpose, we, the collective we, may begin to see the disconnect between what we to do and what we actually need to do. However, we should not only expose this contradiction but provide a solution.”(Stakeholder 4)
“We need to understand what holds things [current practice] in place. Once we understand this we can start to shift or transform this.”(Stakeholder 1)
“It [Transform-Ed!] should be based on shared ideas and true collaboration—both researcher and lecturers need to be willing to share, learn and change.”(Stakeholder 3)
“The beauty of this program is that it situates in the middle of the conversation, the high-end measure here which is student learning. If we can show improved student outcomes, you know that you are changing teacher practice. With this evidence you will have more people willing to adopt.”(Stakeholder 1)
“The more I learn about this program and the more I see the impacts of it, the more convinced I am to use it in my teaching.”(Lecturer 1)
“Researching additional activities and bringing examples from my own teaching made me feel truly part of this. I could then also advocate for these activities as I knew they really worked in practice. I had ownership and could authentically add value to what was already there.”(Lecturer 4)
3.3.4. Implementation
“Making the tool or resource [available] is not enough, you need to implement it and embed it in practice, to ultimately transform practice. This is when the artefact takes on a life of its own. It is then that you can measure this change in practice. And that is your impact.”(Stakeholder 1)
“To take this to other areas of the curriculum and bring on board more people to implement the strategies, first you need to understand why they do what they do, why they don’t already teach in this way, and then you need to make clear links and benefits of this program to their practice. You will need to be open to learning and shared understanding, just as they will be—this is true collaboration.”(Stakeholder 2)
“When I delivered it for the second time, I then knew exactly what and where the breaks and activities were. I was much more confident and well versed the second time around. I actually think seeking out my own active breaks gave me more ownership and confidence in the unit. I knew exactly what I had to do and when I needed to do it.”(Lecturer 3)
“A lot of pre-service teachers came in saying they were not skilled enough, not confident enough to do the unit. They realised quickly that these skills and strategies were accessible to all. They quickly understood the importance of integrating physical activity into their teaching, and how transferable they are to teach any content in the curriculum.”(Lecturer 1)
“I think we need more ‘champions’–more people demonstrating these pedagogies–so that the pre-service teachers have constant exposure to it. More units across first year and also the program spread across more years of the course.”(Lecturer 2)
“By choice I invested in a range of resources for lecture active breaks. This was not essential and could be avoided, but I was empowered to provide as many examples as I could, so I happily sourced out these extra activities and examples.”(Lecturer 1)
“With the knowledge I have received from this unit I now have lots of ideas and activities that I can incorporate. I will aim to integrate these things into the curriculum to enhance the children’s learning processes and reduces the likelihood of the students becoming distracted, especially if they are being active and moving around rather than being sedentary.”(Pre-service teacher 21)
3.3.5. Maintenance
“There is a need to have all the key players or levers across multiple systems, sitting around the one table at the one time. This includes people like the timetablers, resource and facility managers. These people are often left out but are actually critical to the logistics of making or preventing change.”(Stakeholder 1)
“Numerous programs can be translated from research to practice or from setting to setting. But for a program to really stand the test of time, it needs to be transformational. To enact change in and on the human system.”(Stakeholder 1)
“I was able to include concepts even in the variation in delivery due to COVID-19. For the online lectures we were quite creative by providing videos to demonstrate the active academic sessions which the preservice teachers really enjoyed”.(Lecturer 3)
“They [pre-service teachers] need to see the consistent and repeated exposure of these practices. Without this, by fourth year it will be diluted. If they can see it modelled and have experimentation with teaching across their whole course and in professional practice. This reaffirms what they are learning and will help them embed it into their teaching practice.”(Lecturer 2)
“It [Transform-Ed!] needs to be built into the professional practice experience, and there needs to be more support. The more they experience it in practice, the more these concepts will be consolidated and become part of their regular practice.”(Lecturer 2)
“We could also rely on the pre-service teachers—we have given them some foundational knowledge and strategies to deliver curricula actively and they have had such a positive experience. If they question other lecturers as to why they are not seeing these strategies in their lectures or seminars—the demand may ignite interest in more lecturers.”(Lecturer 4)
“There needs to be a system level approach to this. Modelled from the top down and bottom up—if we can get it into all aspects of teaching and learning, as research, then I think we will have a chance to really impact teaching.”(Lecturer 2)
“This has given me a broader understanding of physical activity and how I can incorporate greater activity into my classes when I become a teacher. I know how important it is to get kids active and I will aim to do this in all aspects of my teaching.”(Pre-service teacher 2)
“My feelings towards the importance of physical activity in school have definitely developed and I have gained a wider knowledge on it. That strategies that I have learnt in this unit will be reflected in my teaching when I become a teacher and will shared with all the other staff at my school.”(Pre-service teacher 7)
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Strategy | Elaboration | Strategy |
---|---|---|
Active academic lessons | Normal planned lessons, where the delivery method rather than the content is changed. | Modelled active academic teaching strategies in lectures and practical seminars. |
Integrated pedagogical theory (e.g., embodied pedagogy) and practice (e.g., skills, strategies, organizational, and managerial concepts) to facilitate active academic lessons. | ||
Provided resources for active academic lessons. | ||
Provided opportunity for pre-service teachers to practice skills, strategies, organizational and managerial concepts required to teach active academic lessons. | ||
Provide opportunity for self, peer, and lecturer feedback on pre-service teachers’ active academic micro-teaching. | ||
Active breaks from sitting | During extended teaching blocks, short active breaks were used interrupt prolonged periods of sitting. | Modelled active beaks in lectures and seminars. |
Integrated pedagogical theory and practice (skills, strategies, organizational and managerial concepts) to facilitate active breaks. | ||
Provided active break resources. | ||
Provided opportunity for pre-service teachers to practice skills, strategies, organizational, and managerial concepts required to break sitting time. | ||
Provided opportunity for self, peer, and lecturer feedback on pre-service teachers’ active break micro-teaching. | ||
Transform-Ed! Health Lesson Curriculum Content | Class lessons, which aim to build skills and increase knowledge about the importance of being active and sitting less. | Provided information around the importance of adequate physical activity. |
Provided resources for future teaching around the importance of physical activity. | ||
Provided opportunity for pre-service teachers to practice skills, strategies, organizational, and managerial concepts required to deliver physical activity related content in micro-teaching. | ||
Provided opportunity for self, peer, and lecturer feedback around their physical activity related content micro-teaching. | ||
Active environments/promoting activity during recess and lunchtime | Signage/posters, equipment/facilities and teacher encouragement promoting physical activity at recess and lunchtime. | Delivered seminar/lecture focused on playground-based activities that facilitate physical activity at recess/lunchtime. |
Provided resources for playground-based activities. | ||
Provided opportunity for pre-service teachers to practice skills, strategies, organizational and managerial concepts required to facilitate playground-based activities, in micro-teaching. | ||
Provided opportunity for self, peer and lecturer feedback around their playground activities micro-teaching. | ||
Engaging families | Newsletters and activities provided for parents and children to engage with, to reinforce the importance of children being active and sitting less. | Delivered seminar/lecture on active homework strategies that engage families and educate around the importance of increasing Physical activity and decreasing sitting time at home. |
Provided information around the importance of engaging families and the community when addressing physical activity behaviour (e.g., ecological model). | ||
Provided active homework resources. | ||
Provided opportunity for active homework activities, micro-teaching. | ||
Provided opportunity for self, peer, and lecturer feedback around their active homework tasks. |
RE-AIM Dimension/Item | Participant Level | Evaluation |
---|---|---|
Reach | ||
Program dissemination | Stakeholders | The number, proportion and representativeness of stakeholders willing to participate in the study Quantitative Number of senior academics identified and sent email invitations to participate in presentations and interviews Number of senior academics attending presentations and interviews Characteristics of participants: roles and responsibilities of stakeholders Qualitative Post-program interviews to understand barriers and facilitators to reach and/or recruitment |
Lecturers | The number, proportion and representativeness of lecturers willing to participate Quantitative Number of lecturers/tutors/sessional staff sent email invitations to participate in the study Qualitative Post-program interviews to understand barriers and facilitators to reach and/or recruitment | |
Pre-service teachers | The number, proportion and representativeness of pre-service teachers willing to participate Quantitative Number pre-service teachers enrolled in the first year Bachelor of Education (primary) degree Number of pre-service teachers emailed program advertisement, invitation, plain language statement and consent to participate | |
Pre-implementation Adaptation | Stakeholders | The number, proportion and representativeness of stakeholders who were willing to participate in pre-program discussions Quantitative Number participating in discussion, # participating in post-program interviews |
Pre-implementation Adaptation | Lecturers | The number, proportion and representativeness of lecturers willing to participate in pre-program discussions and curriculum co-design Quantitative Number of lecturers involved in curriculum re-development discussions and co-design (moving from feasibility to implementation) Number of lecturers involved in interviews Qualitative Discussions to reflect on feasibility/pilot study and integrate learnings |
Effectiveness | ||
Lectures | Measures of primary outcome Qualitative (interviews) • Perceived competence, confidence, and willingness to use active strategies in current and future teaching • Perceived impact of intervention on pre-service teachers | |
Pre-service teachers | Measures of primary outcome Quantitative (pre/post self-report surveys) • changes in competence/confidence and willingness to integrate active pedagogies into current and future teaching Qualitative (post-program focus group discussions) • Impact of Transform-Ed! on their emerging identity as teachers | |
Adoption | ||
Stakeholders | The number, proportion, and representativeness of settings and intervention deliverers; variation of adoption across settings and deliverers Quantitative Percent of staff invited that participated Qualitative (post-program interviews) Specific positions/roles represented Characteristics of settings participating Barriers and facilitators to adoption at setting level | |
Lecturers | The number, proportion, and representativeness of settings and intervention deliverers; variation of adoption across settings and deliverers Quantitative Proportion of those receiving compared with # delivering the program Characteristics and qualification of staff delivering the program Settings the intervention is delivered in Qualitative (post-program interviews) Interviews to understand staff participation and barriers and facilitators to program adoption | |
Pre-service teachers | Quantitative Proportion of those involved in Transform-Ed! peer micro-teaching compared with # enrolled in unit | |
Implementation | ||
Stakeholders | Qualitative (post-program interviews) Interviews to understand barriers and facilitators to program implementation | |
Lecturers | The intervention deliverers’ fidelity to the intervention, including consistency of delivery as intended and the time and cost of the intervention; adaptations made to interventions and implementation strategies Qualitative (post-program interviews) Interviews to understand barriers and facilitators to implementation Self-report adherence checklist of key Transform-Ed! elements–delivery lecturer to pre-service teacher | |
Pre-service teachers | Qualitative aspects (post-program focus groups) Barriers and facilitators to implementation | |
Maintenance | ||
Stakeholders | The extent to which the program could become institutionalized or part of the routine practices Qualitative (post-program interviews) Interviews to understand barriers and facilitators to maintenance | |
Lecturers | The extent to which the program has or could become institutionalized or part of the routine practices; the long-term effects of the program on teaching practices after the intervention is completed Qualitative (post-program interviews) Barriers and facilitators to maintenance | |
Pre-service teachers | The perceived long-term effect of the program on current and future teaching practices after the intervention is completed Qualitative (post-program focus groups) Emerging identity as teachers and whether active pedagogy is likely to be prioritized in professional practice future practice |
Mean | SD | |
---|---|---|
Active academic lessons | 4.24 | 0.46 |
Active breaks from sitting | 4.40 | 0.20 |
Health-related content | 4.75 | 0.18 |
Active environment | 3.55 | 0.78 |
Engaging families | 3.74 | 0.82 |
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Lander, N.; Mazzoli, E.; Cassar, S.; Symington, N.; Salmon, J. Embedding Active Pedagogies within Pre-Service Teacher Education: Implementation Considerations and Recommendations. Children 2020, 7, 207. https://doi.org/10.3390/children7110207
Lander N, Mazzoli E, Cassar S, Symington N, Salmon J. Embedding Active Pedagogies within Pre-Service Teacher Education: Implementation Considerations and Recommendations. Children. 2020; 7(11):207. https://doi.org/10.3390/children7110207
Chicago/Turabian StyleLander, Natalie, Emiliano Mazzoli, Samuel Cassar, Naomi Symington, and Jo Salmon. 2020. "Embedding Active Pedagogies within Pre-Service Teacher Education: Implementation Considerations and Recommendations" Children 7, no. 11: 207. https://doi.org/10.3390/children7110207
APA StyleLander, N., Mazzoli, E., Cassar, S., Symington, N., & Salmon, J. (2020). Embedding Active Pedagogies within Pre-Service Teacher Education: Implementation Considerations and Recommendations. Children, 7(11), 207. https://doi.org/10.3390/children7110207