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E-grāmata: Teachers' Personal Epistemologies

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The focus of this book is to explore teachers’ evolving personal epistemologies, or the beliefs we hold about the origin and development of knowledge in the context of teaching. The chapters focus on a range of conceptual frameworks about how university and field-based experiences influence the connections between teachers’ personal epistemologies and teaching practice. In an earlier volume we investigated preservice and inservice teachers’ beliefs and teaching practices (Brownlee, Schraw and Berthelsen, 2011). While we addressed the nature of teachers’ personal epistemologies, learning and teaching practices, and approaches for changing beliefs throughout teacher education programs, the volume did not address conceptual frameworks for the development of teacher’s personal epistemologies. To address this gap, the book is focused on teacher educators, teachers and teacher education programmers in universities with an overall aim of highlighting how we might support preservice teachers’ involvement in learning that is challenging and inservice teachers’ engagement in professional experiences that promote changes in teaching practice. We argue that teachers need to be encouraged to question their beliefs and develop increasingly sophisticated beliefs about their knowledge and their students’ knowledge that facilitate learning and intellectual growth.



This book explores teachers' evolving personal epistemologies and how university and field experiences influence teaching practices. It addresses conceptual frameworks for developing teachers' beliefs, aiming to support preservice and inservice teachers in challenging learning and professional experiences.

Dedication viii
Preface ix
SECTION 1 INTRODUCTION
1 Teachers' Personal Epistemologies: Theoretical and Practical Considerations
3(22)
Gregory Schraw
Lori Olafson
Joanne Lunn
SECTION 2 CONCEPTUAL FRAMES WORKS FOR UNDERSTANDING BELIEFS'
2 The Functions of Beliefs: Teachers' Personal Epistemology on the Pinning Block
25(30)
Helenrose Fives
Michelle M. Buehl
3 The Epistemic Climate of Mrs. M's Science Lesson about the Woodlands as an Ecosystem: A Classroom-Based Research Study
55(32)
Florian C. Feucht
SECTION 3 DEVELOPMENT OF BELIEFS
4 An Account of Teachers' Epistemological Progress in Science
87(26)
Jessica Watkins
Janet E. Coffey
April Cordero Maskiewicz
David Hammer
5 Self-Authorship as a Framework for Understanding the Professional Identities of Early Childhood Practitioners
113(28)
Angela Edwards
Jo Lunn Brownlee
Donna Berthelsen
6 Understanding the Epistemic Nature of Teachers' Reasoning Behind Their Practices From an Aristotelian Perspective
141(28)
Khalil Gholami
7 Personal Epistemology, Nature of Science and Instructional Practice: Towards Denning a Meaningful Relationship
169(22)
Hasan Deniz
8 Exploring Bloom's Taxonomy as a Bridge to Evaluativism: Conceptual Clarity and Implications for Learning, Teaching, and Assessing
191(24)
Lisa Bendixen
Denise Winsor
Raelynn Frazier
SECTION 4 CHANGING PRESERVICE AND INSERVICE TEACHERS' BELIEFS
9 The Potential of Course Interventions to Change Preservice Teachers' Epistemological Beliefs
215(24)
Meghan Parkinson
Liliana Maggioni
10 Addressing Teacher Epistemology and Ideology in History Pedagogy: Teaching Historical Thinking and Media
239(26)
Jeremy Stoddard
11 Clearing a Path for Constructivist Beliefs: Examining Constructivist Pedagogy and Pre-Service Teachers' Epistemic and Learning Beliefs
265(26)
Melissa C. Duffy
Krista R. Muis
Michael J. Foy
12 Exploring the Factors Contributing to Preservice Elementary Teachers' Epistemological Worldviews about Teaching Science
291(32)
Elif Adibelli-Sahin
Janelle M. Bailey
13 Teaching Knowledge and Beliefs in Preservice Teachers
323(28)
Gregory Schraw
Lori Olafson
Michelle Vander Veldt Brye
14 The Place of Epistemological Beliefs Within Teachers' Social Representation Systems: A Model to Explain Geography Teachers' Practices
351(36)
Fernando Alexandre
SECTION 5 PERSONAL EPISTEMOLOGY IN HIGHER EDUCATION
15 The Personal Epistemologies of Tutors in Higher Education
387(22)
Fiona Hallett
Arthur Chapman
SECTION 6 CONCLUSION
16 Reflection and Reflexivity: A Focus on Higher Order Thinking in Teachers' Personal Epistemologies
409(20)
Jo Lunn Brownlee
Gregory Schraw
Biographies 429
Henri Savall, University Jean Moulin Lyon 3 and ISEOR and Véronique Zardet, University Jean Moulin Lyon 3 and ISEOR