PATTERNS OF INTERACTION BETWEEN TEACHERS AND STUDENTS CLASSROOM THINKING, AND THEIR IMPLICATIONS FOR THE PROVISION OF LEARNING OPPORTUNITIES

被引:7
作者
COOPER, P
MCINTYRE, D
机构
[1] Department of Educational Studies, Oxford University, University of Oxford
关键词
D O I
10.1016/0742-051X(94)90031-0
中图分类号
G40 [教育学];
学科分类号
040101 ; 120403 ;
摘要
This paper reports on a study of teachers' and pupils' perceptions of effective teaching and learning. A total of 13 teachers and 325 pupils (aged between 11 and 12) were observed and interviewed. The central focus of the paper is the interaction that was detected between teachers' and pupils' ways of thinking. A grounded analysis of the interactional data yields support for a transactional theory of learning (the works of Bruner and Haste and Vygotsky are cited in particular). The paper also introduces the idea of a continuum of teaching strategies, and shows how perceived teacher effectiveness can be associated with the teacher's ability and willingness to move freely between different points of the continuum, thereby implicitly rejecting crude dichotomies between teacher-centred and pupil-centred learning. It is shown that pupils claim to benefit from both teacher-centred and pupil-centred strategies when the strategies are selected in order to carer for pupils' specific learning requirements. The greatest coherence in teacher pupil accounts of effective teaching and learning, however, seems to focus on the mid-point of the continuum, described here in terms of ''interactive'' and ''reactive'' strategies.
引用
收藏
页码:633 / 646
页数:14
相关论文
共 27 条
[1]  
Baddeley A. D., 1990, HUMAN MEMORY
[2]  
Ben-Peretz M., 1986, ADV RES TEACHER THIN
[3]  
Brophy J., 1986, HDB RES TEACHING, V3rd, P328
[4]  
Brown S., 1993, MAKING SENSE TEACHIN
[5]  
Bruner J.S., 1987, MAKING SENSE CHILDS
[6]  
Calderhead J., 1987, EXPLORING TEACHERS T
[7]  
CALDERHEAD J, 1988, TEACHERS PROFESSIONA
[8]  
Clark C. M. ., 1986, HDB RES TEACHING, P255
[9]  
CLARK CM, 1986, ADV RES TEACHER THIN
[10]  
COOPER H, 1983, TEACHER STUDENT PERC