+ All Categories
Home > Documents > The Investigation of the Relation between Online Case Analyses and Collegial EFL Part-time...

The Investigation of the Relation between Online Case Analyses and Collegial EFL Part-time...

Date post: 25-Dec-2015
Category:
Upload: emory-curtis
View: 213 times
Download: 0 times
Share this document with a friend
29
The Investigation of the Relation between Online Case Analyses and Collegial EFL Part-time Faculty’s Reflection Token, Lee Hua Fan University FLEAT – Boston 2015
Transcript
Page 1: The Investigation of the Relation between Online Case Analyses and Collegial EFL Part-time Faculty’s Reflection Token, Lee Hua Fan University FLEAT Ⅵ –

The Investigation of the Relation between Online Case Analyses and

Collegial EFL Part-time Faculty’s Reflection

Token, LeeHua Fan University

FLEAT Ⅵ– Boston 2015

Page 2: The Investigation of the Relation between Online Case Analyses and Collegial EFL Part-time Faculty’s Reflection Token, Lee Hua Fan University FLEAT Ⅵ –

Burgeoning reliance on part-time faculty

The massive expansion of higher education has caused the continued increase of part-time faculty. This increase appears to be the common approach for schools over the world to reduce their costs (Rossol-Allison & Beyers, 2011), including the United States (Quinn, 2006), UK (Muzaka, 2009), and Australia (Kift, 2003). Since this is a prominent trend in higher education, to improve the quality of the teaching-learning procedure in part-time teachers’ professional development becomes the key to achieve effective instruction.

Page 3: The Investigation of the Relation between Online Case Analyses and Collegial EFL Part-time Faculty’s Reflection Token, Lee Hua Fan University FLEAT Ⅵ –

Problems

• Few resources concentrate specifically on engaging part-time EFL faculty in developmental education community (Eney & Davidson, 2012; Kozeracki, 2005; Maxwell, 1997).

• Part-time faculty is insufficiently offered the same levels of resources, support, and institutional inclusion as the full-time faculty (Kezar, Maxey, & Eaton, 2014) .

• The lack of a supportive environment and professional development opportunities for part-time faculty (Eney & Davidson, 2012).

Page 4: The Investigation of the Relation between Online Case Analyses and Collegial EFL Part-time Faculty’s Reflection Token, Lee Hua Fan University FLEAT Ⅵ –

Reflection

• Teachers and administrators’ capabilities to rethink the purposes of education and reshape their teaching and assistance to meet students’ needs (Burnett & Lingam, 2007).

• The process involves creating meaning around practice (Kahn, Young, Grace, Pilkington, Rush, Tomkinson, & Willis, 2006), repeating cycles of examining practice, tailoring practice, and reflecting upon it.

Page 5: The Investigation of the Relation between Online Case Analyses and Collegial EFL Part-time Faculty’s Reflection Token, Lee Hua Fan University FLEAT Ⅵ –

Why Reflection?

• To engage teachers in exploring their experiences for new understandings and appreciations (Kabouridis, 2011).

• To orient teachers to attune their instructional strategies and assessment in various content areas and new professional development (Brownell, Sindelar, Kiely, & Danielson, 2010)

Page 6: The Investigation of the Relation between Online Case Analyses and Collegial EFL Part-time Faculty’s Reflection Token, Lee Hua Fan University FLEAT Ⅵ –

Online Community

1. University teachers usually teach in isolated contexts and fail to access to their colleagues’ classroom for instructional improvement (Cerbin and Kopp, 2006) .

2. The knowledge delivery online enables teachers to learn through discussing with other teachers without constraints of time and space (Jung & Brush, 2009).

3. The demand to establish online communities for part-time teachers increases (Hou, Chang, & Sung, 2009; Lin, Lin, & Huang, 2008; Liu, 2012; Yeh, 2010).

Page 7: The Investigation of the Relation between Online Case Analyses and Collegial EFL Part-time Faculty’s Reflection Token, Lee Hua Fan University FLEAT Ⅵ –

Case analysis 1

1. Help teachers propose different solutions and contemplate the consequences of their actions (McNergney, Herbert, & Ford, 1994; McNergney & McNergney, 2007).

2. The potential value of online discussions with guided prompts on an exemplary case among preservice and inservice teachers (Koc, Peker, & Osmanoglu, 2009).

Page 8: The Investigation of the Relation between Online Case Analyses and Collegial EFL Part-time Faculty’s Reflection Token, Lee Hua Fan University FLEAT Ⅵ –

Case analysis 2

3. Reading and analyzing cases strengthen prospective teachers’ moral development in addition to decision-making and reasoning abilities (Kessler, 2005) .

4. Sharing analyses and reflections with other participants in online community grants with opportunities to share, discuss, negotiate, and collaborate to construct knowledge of teaching in a situated learning discourse (Liu, 2012).

Page 9: The Investigation of the Relation between Online Case Analyses and Collegial EFL Part-time Faculty’s Reflection Token, Lee Hua Fan University FLEAT Ⅵ –
Page 10: The Investigation of the Relation between Online Case Analyses and Collegial EFL Part-time Faculty’s Reflection Token, Lee Hua Fan University FLEAT Ⅵ –

Five-step analysis

1. identifying educational issues, problems, or opportunities as they present themselves in the case;

2. recognizing different perspectives or values that drive people's actions in the case;

3. utilizing personal, theoretical, and empirical knowledge relevant to the issues identified;

4. proposing possible actions for handling the issues identified; 5. forecasting the likely consequences of such actions

Page 11: The Investigation of the Relation between Online Case Analyses and Collegial EFL Part-time Faculty’s Reflection Token, Lee Hua Fan University FLEAT Ⅵ –

Online community Case analysis

Teacher development

Reflection

Page 12: The Investigation of the Relation between Online Case Analyses and Collegial EFL Part-time Faculty’s Reflection Token, Lee Hua Fan University FLEAT Ⅵ –

Big ?

• Whether and how five-step case analysis approach triggers EFL teachers’ reflection?

• How do part-time teacher participants perceive their learning experience through case analysis and online community discussion?

Page 13: The Investigation of the Relation between Online Case Analyses and Collegial EFL Part-time Faculty’s Reflection Token, Lee Hua Fan University FLEAT Ⅵ –

Research Cite

• a language center affiliated with a private college in Taiwan:– combat teacher isolation– explore ideas– develop a sense of camaraderie.

• Teacher participant: – 4 EFL part-time teachers– Using online communicative tools– affording monthly meeting

Page 14: The Investigation of the Relation between Online Case Analyses and Collegial EFL Part-time Faculty’s Reflection Token, Lee Hua Fan University FLEAT Ⅵ –

Case Sample 1

Page 15: The Investigation of the Relation between Online Case Analyses and Collegial EFL Part-time Faculty’s Reflection Token, Lee Hua Fan University FLEAT Ⅵ –

Case Sample 2

Page 16: The Investigation of the Relation between Online Case Analyses and Collegial EFL Part-time Faculty’s Reflection Token, Lee Hua Fan University FLEAT Ⅵ –

Case Sample 3

Page 17: The Investigation of the Relation between Online Case Analyses and Collegial EFL Part-time Faculty’s Reflection Token, Lee Hua Fan University FLEAT Ⅵ –

Online discussion Platform

• Handy communicative platform (Skype, Moodle, etc.,)

• Online reflective sessions,

• Eight monthly teleconference, ≦60 mins for each.

Page 18: The Investigation of the Relation between Online Case Analyses and Collegial EFL Part-time Faculty’s Reflection Token, Lee Hua Fan University FLEAT Ⅵ –

Focus group interview

• how they perceive case-base approach as a tool to develop critical reflection;

• whether and how forming online teacher community facilitates professional learning; and

• what are the factors required for an effective teachers’ professional development program

Page 19: The Investigation of the Relation between Online Case Analyses and Collegial EFL Part-time Faculty’s Reflection Token, Lee Hua Fan University FLEAT Ⅵ –

Data analysis

• Interpretational analysis (Gall, Borg, & Gall, 1996)– Case analyses,– Reflective journals

• Grounded theory (Strauss & Corbin, 1990)– Interviews,– Reflective discussions

Page 20: The Investigation of the Relation between Online Case Analyses and Collegial EFL Part-time Faculty’s Reflection Token, Lee Hua Fan University FLEAT Ⅵ –

Anticipated Results 1

1. Providing part-time EFL teachers with an opportunity to elevate their professional development in an online learning community,

2. Encouraging teachers to reflect upon their own effectiveness,

3. To obtain insights into teachers’ perspectives on catalysts to make online learning environment fertile domain for reflective practices.

Page 21: The Investigation of the Relation between Online Case Analyses and Collegial EFL Part-time Faculty’s Reflection Token, Lee Hua Fan University FLEAT Ⅵ –

Anticipated Results 2

4. Providing college teachers with a context to work with other teachers through doing case analyses.

5. To discover and evaluate what and how teachers learn during their professional development and to inform both teachers and teacher educators of classroom practices.

Page 22: The Investigation of the Relation between Online Case Analyses and Collegial EFL Part-time Faculty’s Reflection Token, Lee Hua Fan University FLEAT Ⅵ –

References• Burnett, G., & Lingam, G. I. (2007). Reflective teachers and teacher educators in the Pacific

region: Conversations with us not about us. Review of Education, 53, 303–321.• Brownell, M., T., Sindelar, P. T., Kiely, M. C., & Danielson, L. C. (2010). Special education

teacher quality and preparation: Exposing foundations, constructing a new model. Exceptional Children, 76(3), 357-377.

• Cerbin, W. & Kopp, B. (2006). Lesson Study as a Model for Building Pedagogical Knowledge and Improving Teaching. International Journal of Teaching and Learning in Higher Education, 18, 250-257.

• Cochran-Smith, M., & Lytle, S. L. (2001). Beyond certainty: Taking an inquiry stance on practice. In A. Lieberman, & L. Miller (Eds.), Teachers caught in the action: Professional development that matters (45-58). New York, NY: Teachers College Press.

• Conrad, D. (2005). Building and maintaining community in cohort-based online learning. Journal of Distance Education, 20(1). 1-20.

• Cook, P. (1998). Teacher Reflection in Learner-Centred Education. Reform Forum: Journal for Educational Reform in Namibia, 8, 1-8.

Page 23: The Investigation of the Relation between Online Case Analyses and Collegial EFL Part-time Faculty’s Reflection Token, Lee Hua Fan University FLEAT Ⅵ –

• De Arment, S. T., Wetzel, A. P., & Reed, E. (2013). ePortfolios: Promoting Special Educator Adaptive Expertise Through Reflection in a Web-Based Learning Community.

International Journal of ePortfolio, 3(2), 149-160.• Dewey, J. (1933) How We Think, New York, NY: D. C. Heath. • Eisner, E. W. (1991). The enlightened eye: Qualitative inquiry and the enhancement of

educational practice. New York: Macmillan Publishing Company.• Freidus, N. & Hlubinka, M. (2002). Digital storytelling for reflective practice in communities of

learners. ACM SIGGROUP Bulletin, 23(2). 24-26• Gall, M. D., Borg, W. R., & Gall, J. P. (1996). Educational research: An introduction.• White Plains, NY: Longman.• Grossman, P. L. (1992). Teaching and learning with cases: Unanswered questions. In J.

Shulman (Ed.), Case methods in teacher education (pp. 227-39). New York, NY: Teachers College Press, Columbia University.

• Grossman, P., Wineburg, S., & Woolworth, S. (2001). Toward a theory of teacher community. Teachers College Record, 103(6), 942-1012.

Page 24: The Investigation of the Relation between Online Case Analyses and Collegial EFL Part-time Faculty’s Reflection Token, Lee Hua Fan University FLEAT Ⅵ –

• Grushka, K., McLeod, J. H., & Reynolds, R. (2005) Reflecting upon reflection: Theory and practice in one (Australian University teacher education program). Reflective Practice, 6(2), 239-246.

• Hammerness, K., Darling-Hammond, L., & Bransford, J. (2005). How teachers learn and develop. In L. Darling-Hammond & J. Bransford (Eds.), Preparing teachers for a changing world: What teachers should learn and be able to do (358-389). San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass.

• Howe, K. R., & Moses, M. S. (1999). In A. Iran-Nejad, & P. D. Pearson (Eds.), Review of research in education. Ethics in educational research, vol. 24 (pp. 21–59). Washington, DC: AERA.

• Jeffries, C. & Maeder, D. (2005). Using Vignettes to Build and Assess Teacher Understanding of Instructional Strategies. The Professional Educator, 17, 17-28.

• Jung, W. H. & Brush, T. A. (2009). Teacher participation in online communities: why do teachers want to participate in self-generated online communities of K-12 teachers? Journal of Research on Technology in Education, 41(3), 279-303.

Page 25: The Investigation of the Relation between Online Case Analyses and Collegial EFL Part-time Faculty’s Reflection Token, Lee Hua Fan University FLEAT Ⅵ –

• Kabouridis, G. (2011). Learning part-time teaching staff to achieve excellent teaching. US-China Education Review, 872-878

• Kahn, P., Young, R., Grace, S., Pilkington, R., Rush, L., Tomkinson, B., & Willis, I. (2006). The role and effectiveness of reflective practices in programs for new academic staff: A grounded practitioner review of the research literature. York, UK: The Higher Education Academy.

• Kift, S. (2003). Assuring quality in the actualization of teaching, learning and assessment: Towards best practice for the first year experience. Peer reviewed, paper presented at the 6th Pacific Rim First Year in Higher Education Conference, 2002. Retrieved from http://ultibase,rmit.edu.au/Articles/march03/kift/htm

• Kirkwood, A. & Price, L. (2012). The influence upon design of differing conceptions of teaching and learning with technology. In A. D. Olofsson & O. Lindberg (Eds), Informed and communication technologies that will help us design course? Studies in Higher Education, 30(3), 257-274

• Knight, P., Tait, J., & Yorke, M. (2006). The professional learning of teachers in higher education. Studies in Higher Education, 31(3), 319-339.

Page 26: The Investigation of the Relation between Online Case Analyses and Collegial EFL Part-time Faculty’s Reflection Token, Lee Hua Fan University FLEAT Ⅵ –

• Koc, Y., Peker, D., & Osmanoglu, A. (2009). Supporting teacher professional development through online video case study discussions: An assemblage of preservice and inservice teachers and the case teacher. Teaching and Teacher Education, 25, 1158-1168.

• Lee, J. F. K. (2008). A Hong Kong case of lesson study—benefits and concerns. Teaching and Teacher Education, 24, 1115-1124.

• Lewis, C.C. & Perry, R. R. (2009). What is Successful Adaptation of Lesson Study in the US? Journal of Educational Change, 10(4), 365-391.

• Liu, M, H. (2012). Discussing teaching videocases online: Perspectives of preservice and inservice EFL teachers in Taiwan. Computers & Education 59. 120–133.

• Lock, J. V. (2006). A new image: Online communities to facilitate teacher professional development. Journal of Technology and Teacher Education, 14(4). 663-678.

• McAleer, D. & Bangert, A. (2011). Professional Growth through Online Mentoring: A Study of Mathematics Mentor Teachers. Educational Computing Research, 44(1). 83-115.

• McNergney, R., Ducharme, E., & Ducharme, M. (1999). Educating for democracy. Mahwah, NJ: Lawerence Erlbaum.

Page 27: The Investigation of the Relation between Online Case Analyses and Collegial EFL Part-time Faculty’s Reflection Token, Lee Hua Fan University FLEAT Ⅵ –

• McNergney, R., Herbert, J., & Ford, R. (1994). Cooperation and competition in case-based teacher education. Journal of Teacher Education, 45(5), 339-345.

• McNergney, R., & McNergney, J. (2007). Education: The practice and profession of teaching • (5th ed.). Boston, MA: Pearson, Allyn, and Bacon.• McNergney, R., & Medley, M. (1984). Developing skills for instructional supervision. In J.

Cooper (Ed.), Teacher evaluation (pp. 147-78). New York: Longman.• Muzaka, V. (2009). The niche of GTAs (graduate teaching assistants): Perceptions and

reflections. Teaching in Higher Education, 14(1), 1-12• Myers, J. (2012). Lesson Study as a Means for Facilitating Preservice Teacher Reflectivity.

International Journal for the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning, 6(1). 1- 22.• Quinn, S. S. (2006). A descriptive case study of the organization-based self-esteem,

institutional belongingness and career development opportunities of adjunct faculty at a small northeastern college. Journal of Social Change, 1(1), 47-71.

• Rivers, B. A., Richardson, J. T. E., & Price, L. (2014). Promoting reflection in asynchronous virtual learning spaces: tertiary distance tutors’ conceptions. The International Review of Research in Open and Distance Learning, 15(3), 216-231.

Page 28: The Investigation of the Relation between Online Case Analyses and Collegial EFL Part-time Faculty’s Reflection Token, Lee Hua Fan University FLEAT Ⅵ –

• Suratno, T. & Iskandar, S. (2010). Teacher reflection in Indonesia: lessons learnt from a lesson study program. US-China Education Review, 7(12). 39-48.

• Titilayo, O. M., & Uwameiye, R. (2012). Reflective Practice: A Strategy for Improving Teaching Practice in Nigerian Colleges of Education. International Journal of Academic

Research in Progressive Education and Development. 1(4). 282-294.• Van Dreil, J. H. & Berry, A. (2011). Teacher Professional Development Focusing on

Pedagogical Content Knowledge. Educational Researcher, 41(1), 26-27.• Yang, S. –H. (2009). Using blogs to enhance critical reflection and community of practice.

Educational Technology & Society, 12(2), 11-21.

Page 29: The Investigation of the Relation between Online Case Analyses and Collegial EFL Part-time Faculty’s Reflection Token, Lee Hua Fan University FLEAT Ⅵ –

Thank You!Contact: [email protected]

Hua Fan UniversityDepartment of Foreign Language and Literature

No. 1, Huafan Rd. Shihding Dist., New Taipei City 223,

Taiwan


Recommended