Collaborative lesson hook design in science teacher education: Advancing professional practice
McCauley, Veronica ; Davison, Kevin ; Byrne, Corinna
McCauley, Veronica
Davison, Kevin
Byrne, Corinna
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Publication Date
2015-12-14
Type
Article
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Citation
McCauley, V., Davison, K., & Byrne, C. (2015). Collaborative lesson hook design in science teacher education: advancing professional practice. Irish Educational Studies, 34(4), 307-323. doi: 10.1080/03323315.2015.1114457
Abstract
This article documents the process of collaboratively developing lesson hook eresources for science teachers to establish a community of inquiry and to strengthen the pedagogy of science teaching. The authors aim to illustrate how the development and application of strategic hooks can bridge situational interest and personal interest so that lessons may become more meaningful and enduring. Qualitative data from both teacher educators and pre-service teachers involved in the design process, participant research journals, and data from six focus group sessions, illustrate the systematic reflection involved in producing effective and transformative hooks to support teachers and promote deeper student engagement and learning. Key findings reveal a pedagogical model of hook design, the complex elemental make-up of a science hook, the value that this teaching tool adds to the science classroom, and finally, the beneficial outcomes of collaborative resource design between student and staff in preservice teacher education programmes. These hook resources aim to move beyond simply capturing student attention towards voluntary self-engagement, and have significant potential to serve as a pedagogical tool for teacher educators, as well as pre-service, newly qualified, in service, out-of-field, and experienced science teachers, to increase student academic performance, third level science enrolments, and science careers.
Publisher
Taylor & Francis (Routledge)
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Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Ireland