Abstract

The goal of videotaping lessons in a teacher training process is to bring about change in the behavior of preservice teachers to promote self-awareness, openness, and development. The research question was whether preservice teachers, after watching the video recordings of the lessons they taught, would undergo a process of development and increased openness, or remain on a plane of self-criticism. The present qualitative discourse analysis study examined the data based on the principles of social and emotional learning (SEL). The data were organized according to SEL categories: self-criticism, self-awareness, self-management, social awareness, interaction management, and accepting responsibility. Participants in the study were 100 preservice teachers studying in teacher training institutions in Israel. Most preservice teachers (93%) were found to be critical of themselves, but they also tried to open up to a process of self-awareness (82%) and to change their behavior. Some participants (11%) remained “shackled” to their critical attitude and failed to break through the “wall of self-criticism” and change their behavior. Most participants (76%) showed social awareness and mindfulness of their feelings and of those of others; empathy and ability to read signals sent by their students; listening to others as opposed to being emotionally deaf; attention to the nature of interactions with students during the lesson, to how they moved about the classroom and used their voice, and whether they made eye contact with learners. To bring about change, the teacher must watch, observe, and investigate, and be able to better understand emotional and social situations. Teachers who had experienced social and emotional learning are likely to develop self-awareness and the ability to bring about openness, development, and change in their own behavior and in the behavior of their students.

Highlights

  • Videotaping is used in different ways in the process of instruction of preservice teachers (Borko, Jacobs, Eiteljorg, & Pittman, 2008; Borko, Koellner, Jacobs, & Seago, 2011; Lefstein & Snell, 2011, 2014; Quinn, Schweingruber, Keller, et al, 2011; Sherin, 2004; Sherin & van, 2009; Zhang, Lundeberg, Koehler, & Eberhardt, 2011; Zilka 2019)

  • Teachers who had experienced social and emotional learning are likely to develop self-awareness and the ability to bring about openness, development, and change in their own behavior and in the behavior of their students

  • Watching in a sheltered place, alone or with a person invited by the preservice teacher, is likely to result in a reflective process and a reshaping of behavioral patterns, without fear of criticism and without the categorization that may arise from criticism voiced by an outside party

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Summary

Introduction

Videotaping is used in different ways in the process of instruction of preservice teachers (Borko, Jacobs, Eiteljorg, & Pittman, 2008; Borko, Koellner, Jacobs, & Seago, 2011; Lefstein & Snell, 2011, 2014; Quinn, Schweingruber, Keller, et al, 2011; Sherin, 2004; Sherin & van, 2009; Zhang, Lundeberg, Koehler, & Eberhardt, 2011; Zilka 2019). Researchers (Zhang, Lundeberg, Koehler, & Eberhardt, 2011; Zilka, 2019) have found that watching the videotaped lessons they have taught allowed preservice teachers to observe their behavioral patterns. It placed a mirror in front of them. The present study examined whether preservice teachers experienced a process of openness and development following the viewing of videotaped lessons they taught, or whether they remained on the plane of self-criticism

The Purpose of the Study
The Importance of the Study
Method
Discussion
Body Language
11. Social Awareness and Interaction Management
Findings
12. Conclusion
13. Limitations of the Study and Future Research
Full Text
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