Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
372686 Studies in Educational Evaluation 2013 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

This study aims to unravel the relationships between student teachers’ learning patterns and how they actually learn in practice as measured during multiple concrete learning experiences. In previous research aptitude and event measures often pointed in different directions. 90 student teachers’ learning patterns were measured with an aptitude instrument, designed for the specific context of learning to teach. Multiple concrete learning activities were measured with a structured digital log. Results showed meaningful relations between students’ learning patterns and their learning activities, taking multiple learning experiences into account. Survival oriented student teachers show more inactiveness in their learning, reproduction oriented student teachers learn by doing to improve their teaching behavior, dependent meaning oriented student teachers are more influenced by previous negative experiences and independent meaning oriented student teachers show the most deep and most active way of learning. But interestingly, the results also show that some relations as described in literature did not show up. The choice for a particular processing strategy and also the intentionality of the learning experiences was not related to student teachers’ learning patterns. This study demonstrates the added value of combining both types of instruments in research and practice.

► Meaningful relations between learning patterns and learning activities are found. ► Survival oriented student teachers show more inactiveness in their learning. ► Reproduction oriented learners learn by doing to improve their teaching behavior. ► Meaning oriented student teachers show most deep and active way of learning ► The intentionality of the learning experience is not related to the learning pattern.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Social Sciences Education
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