Student teachers go online; the need for a focus on human agency and pedagogy in learning about `e-learning' in initial teacher education (ITE)

  • Authors:
  • Keith Turvey

  • Affiliations:
  • School of Education, University of Brighton, Brighton, UK BN1 9PH

  • Venue:
  • Education and Information Technologies
  • Year:
  • 2008

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Abstract

This paper argues that student teachers' developing pedagogical approaches achieve expression within the virtual classroom in much the same way as they would in the `real' classroom; that is to say through language as the primary tool of mediation. Whilst the advent of new communications technologies affords new arenas in which learning can take place--Virtual Learning Environments (VLEs), online communities, Managed Learning Environments--the importance of human agency and the significance of language remains pivotal to the effective use of such technologies. As such it is argued that student teachers need opportunities to engage in authentic online dialogue with children as they endeavour to find their online pedagogical voice. The key findings emerge from a case study carried out with a group of Year 3 ICT specialists on an undergraduate initial teacher education (ITE) degree course in the UK, leading to qualified teacher status (QTS) in the primary and lower secondary phases of education. Funding from the University of Brighton, Community University Partnership Programme (CUPP), was used to design and resource a module, which facilitated opportunities for student teachers to engage in online learning dialogues with children from a local primary school, having initially met with the children face-to-face. Fourteen student teachers participated in the study. Interviews were carried out and their online dialogues with the children were analysed to establish both the issues and potential advantages of such a situated approach to learning about the educational use of new communications technologies with children.