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Saturday, January 9, 2021

The procedure for development of multiple choice tests items and assembling the test prepare ten multiple choice items from subject of your choice | Teacher Education | aiou solved assignment | Course Code 8602

Q 5:  Briefly describe the procedure for the development of multiple-choice test items assemble the test and prepare ten multiple-choice items from the subject of your choice.

CourseEducational Assessment and Evaluation

Course code 8602

Level: B.Ed Solved Assignment 

Answer:

Multiple choice test questions, also known as items, can be an effective and efficient way to assess learning outcomes. Multiple choice test items have several potential advantages:

Versatility: 

Multiple choice test items can be written to assess various levels of learning outcomes, from basic recall to application, analysis, and evaluation. Because students are choosing from a  set of potential answers, however, there are obvious limits on what can be tested with multiple-choice items. For example, they are not an effective way to test students’ ability to organize thoughts or articulate explanations or creative ideas.


Reliability: 

Reliability is defined as the degree to which a test consistently measures a learning outcome. Multiple-choice test items are less susceptible to guessing than true/false questions, making them a more reliable means of assessment. The reliability is enhanced when the number of MC items focused on a single learning objective is increased. In addition, the objective scoring associated with multiple choice test items frees them from problems with scorer inconsistency that can plague the scoring of essay questions.


Validity: 

Validity is the degree to which a test measures the learning outcomes it purports to measure. Because students can typically answer a multiple-choice item much more quickly than an essay question, tests based on multiple-choice items can typically focus on a relatively broad representation of course material, thus increasing the validity of the assessment. The key to taking advantage of these strengths, however, is the construction of good multiple-choice items.


A multiple-choice item consists of a problem, known as the stem, and a list of suggested solutions, known as alternatives. The alternatives consist of one correct or best alternative, which is the answer, and incorrect or inferior alternatives, known as distractors.



Constructing an Effective Stem

1. The stem should be meaningful by itself and should present a definite problem. A stem that presents a definite problem allows a focus on the learning outcome. A stem that does not present a clear problem, however, may test students’ ability to draw inferences from vague descriptions rather than serving as a more direct test of students’ achievement of the learning outcome.




2. The stem should not contain irrelevant material, which can decrease the reliability and the validity of the test scores (Haldyna and Downing 1989)


3. The stem should be negatively stated only when significant learning outcomes require it. Students often have difficulty understanding items with negative phrasing (Rodriguez 1997). If a significant learning outcome requires negative phrasing, such as the identification of dangerous laboratory or clinical practices, the negative element should be emphasized with italics or capitalization.



4. The stem should be a question or a partial sentence. A question stem is preferable because it allows the student to focus on answering the question rather than holding the partial sentence in working memory and sequentially completing it with each alternative (Statman 1988). The cognitive load is increased when the stem is constructed with an initial or interior blank, so this construction should be avoided.






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Saturday, January 2, 2021

Compare the Blooms taxonomy with SOLO Taxonomy of educational objectives. | Teacher Education | aiou solved assignment | Course Code 8602

     


Q 4:  Compare Bloom's taxonomy with the SOLO Taxonomy of educational objectives.


CourseEducational Assessment and Evaluation

Course code 8602

Level: B.Ed Solved Assignment 

Topic: Bloom taxonomy with SOLO Taxonomy of educational objectives


Answer:

The reasons why we prefer to use SOLO Taxonomy


The SOLO Taxonomy (Biggs & Collis, 1982), provides a measure of cognitive learning outcomes or understanding of thinking, that, in my experience, teachers have felt comfortable adopting. This hierarchical model is comprehensive, supported by objective criteria, and used across different subjects and on differing types of assignments (Hattie & Purdie, 1998). 
Teachers enjoy the way that SOLO represents student learning of quite diverse material in stages of ascending structural complexity, and that these stages display a similar sequence across tasks. Furthermore, surface or deep levels of understanding can be planned for and assessed by coding a student’s thinking performance against unstructured, multi-structural, relational, or extended abstract categories, as shown in Table 1. Using visual symbols to represent levels of understanding in SOLO means that coding for the complexity of thinking can be undertaken by both student and teacher, allowing “where should we go next?” decisions and thinking interventions to more accurately target student learning needs. Hook, P. 2006 A Thinking Curriculum NZCER p100


Notes from Professor John Hattie

Course 224: Assessment in the Classroom (The University of Auckland)
"Creating best tests using Bloom's taxonomy or the SOLO classification."


Critique of Bloom's taxonomy

The taxonomy was published in 1956, has sold over a million copies, has been translated into several languages, and has been cited thousands of times.  The Bloom taxonomy has been extensively used in teacher education to suggest learning and teaching strategies, has formed the basis of many tests developed by teachers (at least while they were in teacher training), and has been used to evaluate many tests.  It is thus remarkable that the taxonomy has been subject to so little research or evaluation.

Most of the evaluations are philosophical treatises noting, among other criticisms, that there is no evidence for the invariance of these stages, or claiming that the taxonomy is not based on any known theory of learning or teaching.

▪  The Bloom taxonomy presupposes that there is a necessary relationship between the questions asked and the responses to be elicited, whereas, in the SOLO taxonomy, both the questions and the answers can be at differing levels.

Whereas Bloom separates 'knowledge' from the intellectual abilities or processes that operate on this 'knowledge', the SOLO taxonomy is primarily based on the processes of understanding used by the students when answering the prompts.  Knowledge, therefore, permeates across all levels of the SOLO taxonomy.

▪  Bloom has argued that his taxonomy is related not only to complexity but also to an order of difficulty such that problems requiring behavior at one level should be answered more correctly before tackling problems requiring behavior at a higher level. Although there may be measurement advantages to this increasing difficulty, this is not a necessary requirement of the SOLO method. It is possible for an item at the relational level, for example, to be constructed so that it is less difficult than an item at the unstructured level. For example, an item aiming to elicit relational responses might be 'How does the movement of the Earth relative to the sun define day and night'. This may be easier (depending on instruction, etc.) than a unstructured item that asks 'What does celestial rotation mean?'

▪  Bloom’s taxonomy is not accompanied by criteria for judging the outcome of the activity (Ennis, 1985), whereas SOLO is explicitly useful for judging the outcomes. Take, for example, a series of art questions suggested by Hamben (1984).

Knowledge

Who painted Guernica?

Comprehension. 

Describe the subject matter of Guernica.
Application. 
Relate the theme of Guernica to a current event.

Analysis. 

What compositional principles did Picasso use in Guernica?

Synthesis. 

Imagine yourself as one of the figures in Guernica and describe your life history?

Evaluation. 

What is your opinion of Picasso’s Guernica?

When using Bloom’s taxonomy, the supposition is that the question leads to a particular type of Bloom response. There is no necessary relationship, however, as a student may respond with a very deep response to the supposedly lower-order question: 'Describe the subject matter of Guernica?' Similarly, a student may provide a very surface response to 'What is your opinion of Picasso’s Guernica'? When using the SOLO taxonomy, either the questions would be written differently, or the test scorer would concentrate on classifying the responses only. An example of re-writing to maximize the correspondence between the question asked and the answer expected is:

Unistructural. 

Who painted Guernica?

Multistructural. 

Outline at least two compositional principles that Picasso used in Guernica.

Relational. 

Relate the theme of Guernica to a current event.

Extended Abstract. 

What do you consider Picasso was saying via his painting of Guernica?

Advantages of the SOLO model for evaluation of student learning

▪  There are several advantages of the SOLO model over the Bloom taxonomy in the evaluation of student learning.

▪  These advantages concern not only item construction and scoring, but incorporate features of the process of evaluation that pay attention to how students learn, and how teachers devise instructional procedures to help students use progressively more complex cognitive processes.

▪  Unlike the Bloom taxonomy, which tends to be used more by teachers than by students, the SOLO can be taught to students such that they can learn to write 
progressively more difficult answers or prompts.

▪  There is a closer parallel between how teachers teach and how students learn.

▪  Both teachers and students often progress from more surface to deeper constructs and this is mirrored in the four levels of the SOLO taxonomy.

▪  There is no necessary progression in the manner of teaching or learning in the Bloom taxonomy.

▪  The levels can be interpreted relative to the proficiency of the students. Six-year-old students can be taught to derive general principles and suggest hypotheses, though obviously to a different level of abstraction and detail than their older peers. Using the SOLO method, it is relatively easy to construct items to assess such abstractions.

▪  The SOLO taxonomy not only suggests an item writing methodology, but the same taxonomy can be used to score the items. The marker assesses each response to establish either the number of ideas (one = unstructured; _ two = multi-structural) or the degree of interrelatedness (directly related or abstracted to more general principles). This can lead to more dependability of scoring.

▪  Unlike the experience of some with the Bloom taxonomy it is relatively easy to identify and categorise the SOLO levels.

▪  Similarly, teachers could be encouraged to use the 'plus one' principle when choosing appropriate learning material for students. That is, the teacher can aim to move the student one level higher in the taxonomy by appropriate choice of learning material and instructional sequencing


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Friday, September 4, 2020

Explain the cognitive domain of Bloom’s Taxonomy of education objective | Teacher Education | aiou solved assignment | Course Code 8602

    


Q 4:  a) Explain the cognitive domain of Bloom’s Taxonomy of education objective.

CourseEducational Assessment and Evaluation

Course code 8602

Level: B.Ed Solved Assignment 

Answer:


Cognitive Domain of Bloom’s Taxonomy

Bloom's Taxonomy was created in 1956 under the leadership of educational psychologist Dr Benjamin Bloom to promote higher forms of thinking in education, such as analyzing and evaluating concepts, processes, procedures, and principles, rather than just remembering facts (rote learning). It is most often used when designing educational, training,   and learning processes.




The Three Domains of Learning



The committee identified three domains of educational activities or learning (Bloom, et al. 1956):

  • Cognitive: mental skills (knowledge)
  • Affective: growth in feelings or emotional areas (attitude or self)
  • Psychomotor: manual or physical skills (skills)


Since the work was produced by higher education, the words tend to be a little bigger than we normally use.  Domains may be thought of as categories. 



Instructional designers, trainers, and educators often refer to these three categories as KSA (Knowledge [cognitive], Skills [psychomotor], and Attitudes [affective]). This taxonomy of learning behaviors may be thought of as “the goals of the learning process.” That is, after a learning episode, the learner should have acquired a new skill, knowledge, and/or attitude.  While the committee produced an elaborate compilation of the cognitive and affective domains, they omitted the psychomotor domain. Their explanation for this oversight was that they have little experience in teaching manual skills at the college level. However, there have been at least three psychomotor models created by other researchers.




Their compilation divides the three domains into subdivisions, starting from the simplest cognitive process or behavior to the most complex. The divisions outlined are not absolutes and some other systems or hierarchies have been devised, such as the Structure of Observed Learning Outcome (SOLO). However, Bloom's taxonomy is easily understood and is probably the most widely applied one in use today.




Cognitive Domain


The cognitive domain involves knowledge and the development of intellectual skills (Bloom, 1956). This includes the recall or recognition of specific facts, procedural patterns, and concepts that serve in the development of intellectual abilities and skills. There are six major categories of cognitive processes, starting from the simplest to the most complex (see the table below for an in-depth coverage of each category):

  • Knowledge
  • Comprehension
  • Application
  • Analysis
  • Synthesis
  • Evaluation


The categories can be thought of as degrees of difficulty. That is, the first ones must normally be mastered before the next one can take place.



Bloom's Revised Taxonomy



Lorin Anderson, a former student  of Bloom, and David Krathwohl revisited the cognitive domain in the mid-nineties and made some changes, with perhaps the three most prominent ones being (Anderson, Krathwohl, Airasian, Cruikshank, Mayer, Pintrich, Raths, Wittrock, 2000):


  • changing the names in the six categories from noun to verb forms
  • rearranging them as shown in the chart below
  • creating a processes and levels of knowledge matrix

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Wednesday, August 26, 2020

Importance of Table of Specification| How to Develop a table of specification | Teacher Education | aiou solved assignment | Course Code 8602

   


Q.3  Describe the importance of the table of specifications also develop a two-way table of specifications for 50 50-mark paper by selecting any unit from 9th class general science.


CourseEducational Assessment and Evaluation

Course code 8602

Level: B.Ed Solved Assignment 


Answer:

Table of Specification and its Importance



The purpose of a Table of Specifications is to identify the achievement domains being measured and to ensure that a fair and representative sample of questions appears on the test. Teachers cannot measure every topic or objective and cannot ask every question they might wish to ask. A Table of specifications allows the teacher to construct a test that focuses on the key areas and weights those different areas based on their importance. A Table of Specifications provides the teacher with evidence that a test has content validity and that it covers what should be covered.



Designing a Table of Specifications 


Tables of Specification typically are designed based on the list of course objectives, the topics covered in class, the amount of time spent on those topics, textbook chapter topics, and the emphasis and space provided in the text. In some cases, a great weight will be assigned to an extremely important concept, even if relatively little class time was spent on the topic. 


Three steps are involved in creating a Table of Specifications: 

  1. Choosing the measurement goals and domain to be covered, 
  2. Breaking the domain into key or fairly independent parts-concepts, terms, procedures, applications, and 
  3. Constructing the table. Teachers have already made decisions (or the district has decided for them) about the broad areas that should be taught, so the choice of what broad domains a test should cover has usually already been made. A bit trickier is to outline the subject matter into smaller components, but most teachers have already had to design teaching plans, strategies, and schedules based on an outline of content. Lists of classroom objectives, district curriculum guidelines, textbook sections, and keywords are other commonly used sources for identifying categories for Tables of Specification. When actually constructing the table, teachers may only wish to use a simple structure, as with the first example above, or they may be interested in greater detail about the types of items, the cognitive levels for items, the best mix of objectively scored items, open-ended and constructed-response items, and so on, with even more guidance than is provided in the second example.



How can the use of a Table of Specifications benefit your students, including those with special needs? 

A Table of Specifications benefits students in two ways. First, it improves the validity of teacher-made tests. Second, it can improve student learning as well.


A Table of Specifications helps to ensure that there is a match between what is taught and what is tested. Classroom assessment should be driven by classroom teaching which itself is driven by course goals and objectives. In the chain below, Tables of Specifications prov ide the link between teaching and testing.




Objectives Teaching Testing 



Tables of Specifications can help students at all ability levels learn better. By providing the table to students during instruction, students can recognize the main ideas, key skills, and the relationships among concepts more easily. The Table of Specifications can act in the same way as a concept map to analyze  content areas. Teachers can even collaborate with students on the construction of the Table of specifications -what are the main ideas and topics, what emphasis should be placed on each topic, and what should be on the test? Open discussion and negotiation of these issues can encourage higher levels of understanding while also modeling good learning and study skills.




Table of Specifications for a Performance Task (Cells can be cleared to create your own. You can also add rows.) 


Standards

Objectives

 Task Prompts

Assessment Criteria (rubric)

Reading 3.0:

Read and respond to historically or culturally significant

works of literature and conduct in-depth analyses of recurring themes.

 

Reading 3.2:

Analyze how the theme or meaning of a selection represents a view or comment on life, using textual evidence to support the claim.

SWBAT:

•  Draw conclusions about literature through textual analysis.

•  Respond in writing to recurring themes

•  Use examples and quotes from the text to support their viewpoint on themes in the literature.

Pick one recurring heme from The House on Mango Street. What do

you think Cisneros is trying to communicate through this personal

narrative? Write a 4 paragraph essay on this question and use textual

evidence to support your thesis.

Ideas:

An essay is focused and uses interesting, original details. The thesis is clear, convincing, and fresh. Supporting details are accurate and relevant. Quotations are carefully selected, thought-provoking, and support the thesis. The essay analyzes literature and shows a thorough understanding of the text

Writing 1.3:

Structure ideas and arguments in a sustained, persuasive, and sophisticated way

and support them with precise and relevant examples.

SWBAT:

•  Write an introduction that includes a hook, thesis, and background

information.

•  Write organized body paragraphs containing textual support.

•  Write an effective conclusion.

•  Write transitions to connect ideas.

Your introduction should include a hook, thesis, and background information about the novel or novelist. Details within each paragraph should support the main idea of each paragraph, and these main ideas should contribute to your thesis. The conclusion should restate your thesis and provide insight into the novel. Transitions should be used to connect ideas between paragraphs.

Organization:

Strong organization highlights key ideas. The Introduction is engaging and provides a clear direction. Details and commentary are closely linked to the thesis. Body paragraphs are organized and contain a strong balance between concrete details and commentary. Transitions link ideas together smoothly and naturally. The conclusion is thought-provoking and reinforces important Ideas.

Writing 1.9:

Revise text to highlight individual voice, improve sentence variety and style, and enhance subtlety of meaning and tone in ways that are consistent with the purpose, audience, and genre.

SWBAT:

•  Use appropriate and effective words in writing.

•  Vary sentence length and complexity.

•  Write in a formal essay tone –avoiding casual and slang expressions.

Check over and revise your work, or ask for feedback from the teacher or peers. Make sure to use your own words in describing your interpretation of the novel. Vary your sentence structures and pick words that capture your ideas precisely.

Style:

Well-chosen words convey the message in a precise way, adding new levels of understanding. Word choice is explicit and vivid, and phrasing is memorable and readable. Sentences are specific, strong, and vary in complexity and length. Words are not wasted. Writing is fluid and strong.

Conventions 1.1:

Demonstrate control of grammar, diction, and paragraph and sentence structure and an understanding of English

usage.

 

Conventions 1.2:

Produce legible work that shows accurate spelling and correct punctuation

SWBAT:

•  Write complete sentences with little to no grammatical errors.

•  Produce legible work that shows accurate spelling and correct punctuation and capitalization.

•  Use MLA format.

Pay attention to grammar, and use correct spelling and punctuation. Make sure that you are using your words correctly. Use the MLA format in citing references from the text or other texts.

Conventions:

An essay is essentially free from grammar, punctuation, and spelling errors. Errors are so few and minor they are easily overlooked. An essay is presented in the correct format.



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Tuesday, August 25, 2020

Validity of a Test | Types of Validity of a Test | Teacher Education | aiou solved assignment | Course Code 8602

  


Q. 2  Explain the concept of validity of a test;  also explain different types of validity of test.


CourseEducational Assessment and Evaluation

Course code 8602

Level: B.Ed Solved Assignment 

Answer:


Validity of a Test and its Types


Test validity is the extent to which a test  (such as a chemical, physical, or scholastic test) accurately measures what it is supposed to measure. In the fields of psychological testing and educational testing, "validity refers to the degree to which evidence and theory support the interpretations of test scores entailed by proposed uses of tests". Although classical models divided the concept into various "validities" (such as content validity, criterion validity, and construct validity), the currently dominant view is that validity is a single unitary construct.



Validity is generally considered the most important issue in psychological and educational testing because it concerns the meaning placed on test results.  Though many textbooks present validity as a static construct,  various models of validity have evolved since the first published recommendations for constructing psychological and education tests.[6] These models can be categorized into two primary groups: classical models, which include several types of validity, and modern models, which present validity as a single construct. The modern models reorganize classical "validities" into either "aspects" of validity[3] or "types" of validity-supporting evidence.


Test validity can itself be tested/validated using tests of inter-rater reliability, intra-rater reliability, repeatability (test-retest reliability), and other traits, usually via multiple runs of the test whose results are compared. Statistical analysis helps determine whether the differences between the various results are large enough to be a problem or are acceptably small.



Different types of validity of the test:


External Validity


External validity is about generalization: To what extent can an effect in research, be generalized to populations, settings, treatment variables, and measurement variables? External validity is usually split into two distinct types, population validity and ecological validity and they are both essential elements in judging the strength of an experimental design.



Internal Validity


Internal validity is a measure that ensures that a researcher's experiment design closely follows the principle of cause and effect. “Could there be an alternative cause, or causes, that explain my observations and results?”



Test Validity

Test validity is an indicator of how much meaning can be placed upon a set of test results.



Criterion Validity

Criterion Validity assesses whether a test reflects a certain set of abilities.


  • Concurrent validity measures the test against a benchmark test and high correlation indicates that the test has strong criterion validity.
  • Predictive validity is a measure of how well a test predicts abilities. It involves testing a group of subjects for a certain construct and then comparing them with results obtained at some point in the future.


Content Validity

Content validity is the estimate of how much a measure represents every single element of a construct.




Construct Validity


Construct validity defines how well a test or experiment measures up to its claims. A test designed to measure depression must only measure that particular construct, not closely related ideals such as anxiety or stress.

  • Convergent validity tests that construct that are expected to be related are, in fact, related.
  • Discriminant validity tests that construct that should have no relationship do, in fact, not have any relationship. (also referred to as divergent validity)


Face Validity

Face validity is a measure of how representative a research project is at face value,' and whether it appears to be a good project.


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Sunday, August 23, 2020

Significance and Scope of Establishment of Partnership between the Teacher Training Institutions | Teacher Education | aiou solved assignment | course code 8602

 


Q. 1  Explain the significance and scope of the establishment of a partnership between the teacher training institutions?


CourseEducational Assessment and Evaluation

Course code 8602

Level: B.Ed Solved Assignment 


Answer:


Establishment of Partnership between the teachers training Institutions


Society has developed itself into a complex system of organizations and interactions, therefore the demands on schools and schooling have become greater. The need for professional teachers grew with it. Teaching is formative in nature and one grows within the profession and hence through daily experiences. As a result of this, various countries have over the years developed different modes of school-based teacher training.



Society has developed itself into a complex system of organizations and interactions, therefore the demands on schools and schooling have become greater. The need for professional teachers grew with it. With the recognition of teaching as a profession it has been acknowledged that all teachers require specialised training, to develop the knowledge and competencies necessary to take on teaching. However, educating teachers in specialized institutes was not the answer to the demand for qualified teachers. 



At the end of the 1980s the growing dissatisfaction with ‘teaching practice’ culminated in a UNESCO 
report. (Down, 1995). Teacher preparation was regarded as insufficient, due to a lack of linkages between for instance subject matter and teaching processes, and preparation for diverse class/school situations. Furthermore, the lack of training of cooperating teachers and the lack of credibility of college or university supervisors were seen as a real problem. (Down, 1995). As a result of this, pre-service teacher education practically all over Europe, the USA, and Australia went through vigorous changes. One model that tried to address these concerns encouraged a strong partnership between universities, colleges, and schools. (Down, 1995). Since then, in different countries in and outside Europe, several models of partnerships and types of cooperation between schools and institutes for teacher education emerged, under the general heading of school-based teacher education. (e.g. Furlong, 1996, Bulloch, 1997 and Snoek, 2001).



Therefore the main purpose of the Faculty of Education Professional Development School Partnership will be simultaneous renewal of the teacher education programme at the university and teaching and learning in schools. The setting up of Faculty-School Partnerships offers us the possibility of exploring different ways of learning as a result of which there will be greater relevance to the teaching-learning context (Teitel, 1998; Zeichner and Miller, 1997). 



PDSs create opportunities, which allow us, at the annual Association of Teacher Education in Europe conference 749 as teacher educators, to take on different roles. It is within such a context that we expect beginning teacher educators to feel at their best. They have just left the classrooms and are therefore ideally positioned to establish the necessary philosophical and pedagogical underpinnings necessary for any professional discourse to take place. 



Experience has shown us the need to work together with teachers in schools. On the one hand, we need teachers at the school site who, through their diverse qualities, will be good models to prospective teachers. In this respect teachers can serve as mentors or co-operating teachers, both fulfilling different but complementary roles. On the other hand, the university lecturer has the opportunity to get closer to the school and establish the ground for educational discourse to take place between the student-teachers and lecturers alike. Such opportunities do not only affect the personal and professional development of participants in the classroom context but also address areas that go beyond the classroom and which affect school life in general. 



The contribution by mentors should ascertain a faculty-school partnership in at least the following areas: the training of student-teachers, the development of school programs, and continued teacher formation. In this model, the student-teacher learns from a mentor and a cooperating teacher by spending quality time in the classroom observing the co-operating teacher perform tasks, asking questions and receiving assistance, and gradually assuming increasing personal responsibilities as his/her knowledge and skills develop. 




The cooperating teacher initially models the task for the student-teacher and then provides coaching (i.e. instructions, feedback) as the student-teacher attempts the task, fading the amount of coaching and turning over more and more responsibility for independent task completion to the student-teacher as his/her skills develop. In their experience, Neubert and Binko (1998) found that the PDS internship was more effective than the regular program in preparing teacher candidates to maintain classroom discipline, use technology effectively, and reflect on their teaching. Berrill (1997) and Neubert and Binko (1998) explain that the use of mentors as teacher trainers in schools has actually even had a profound developmental effect on the qualified teachers themselves. They become more skilled at using theoretical discourse as part of their daily practice. 


With the introduction of such partnerships, we aim to create and sustain a climate where professional discourse and action take place which will be of benefit to the student-teachers and the schools. Rather than going in for a six-week block teaching practice where the student is in full control of the classroom, we would like to introduce an atmosphere where the student has opportunities to work in several scenarios/contexts with different groups of students. 


It will also create opportunities for students to experience school life and whole school activities/initiatives rather than being involved only with one class. Through this approach, we hope to overcome one of the main problems facing beginning teachers when they are confronted with unexpected aspects of the job which reflect that teaching is by far a complex activity that goes well beyond teaching a subject or class but one that involves countless interacting and changing variables. The scenario we want is one that encourages, develops, nurtures, and sustains professional dialogue which enhances the teaching and learning experience of all participants now no longer involves student, class, and university tutor only, but is extended further to include mentor and cooperating teacher. It also allows the student to engage in developing the skills of reflection and application which was difficult to engage in, given the previous model (Pollard, 1998).





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