El trabajo docente y las relaciones con el estudiantado desde las representaciones de docente en formación

The current situation of Postmodernity raises the challenge, to initial teacher training, to ensure a proper inclusion to school contexts which are highly stressed regarding training demands. This research explores the representations pre-service teachers have regarding teaching and their relationsh...

詳細記述

保存先:
書誌詳細
主要な著者: Sánchez Sánchez, Gerardo Ignacio, Jara Amigo, Ximena Elizabeth
フォーマット: Online
言語:spa
出版事項: Universidad de Costa Rica 2017
主題:
オンライン・アクセス:https://revistas.ucr.ac.cr/index.php/aie/article/view/29619
タグ: タグ追加
タグなし, このレコードへの初めてのタグを付けませんか!
その他の書誌記述
要約:The current situation of Postmodernity raises the challenge, to initial teacher training, to ensure a proper inclusion to school contexts which are highly stressed regarding training demands. This research explores the representations pre-service teachers have regarding teaching and their relationship with elementary school children. Using a qualitative methodological approach, with an exploratory-descriptive scope, starting from the use of interviews, the present piece of research was built in a dialogue arena with 50 students from the Elementary Teacher Education Program, with a minor in Spanish Language, Mathematics, Social and Natural Science of Universidad Católica del Maule. The results show the teaching work representation as a human effort equipped with a complexity derived from the requirement of integrality and otherness, and from the demands of a diverse, technological society. It can be concluded that while becoming integrated into the classroom, pre-service teachers are confronted with an area defined as complex and uncertain, in which it is important to consider that they are active and heterogeneous with respect to their willingness, interests, and capacity to learn, and as a consequence these factors stress the relationship and the teacher authority status. From the point of view of implications for initial teacher training, pre-service practitioners fail to see that the same rationality with which the school operates roughly explains the complexity of the new territory where they will have to carry out their work.