Resources Preservice Teachers Use to Think about Student Writing
Abstract
This article identifies five categories of resources that preservice teachers drew on as they considered student writing and planned their own approaches to assessing and teaching writing. Identifying these resources helps us better understand how beginning writing teachers think about student writing—and better understand mismatches that commonly occur between what teacher educators teach and what new teachers actually do. Our study builds on literature that considers how writing teachers are prepared, extends research about how preservice teachers use what they learn,and adds layers of detail to literature about the resources that beginning teachers draw upon to aid and support them in their work. The pedagogical and research projects described in this study stem from a communities-of-practice framework. Our methods surfaced preservice teachers’claims about writing and the resources they drew upon to support those claims. Drawing upon our rhetorical view of writing, we worked inductively to identify these claims and resources, using grounded analysis of transcripts from preservice teachers’ VoiceThread conversations to develop a taxonomy of 15 resources grouped into 5 categories: understanding of students and student writing; knowledge of context; colleagues; roles; and writing. This research has implications for educators and researchers working in teacher preparation. Scaffolded instruction is essential to help beginning teachers use particular resources—and to employ resources in ways connected with rhetorical conceptual frameworks. To that end, the taxonomy of resources can be used as a tool for individual and programmatic assessment, as well as to facilitate scaffolded instruction.
Reference
Zuidema, L. A., & Fredricksen, J. E. (2016). Resources Preservice Teachers Use to Think about Student Writing. Research in the Teaching of English, 51(1), 12.
Journal
Research in the Teaching of English
Analysis
Is this article part of a larger project or series of studies?
no
Does this study draw on a large, preexisting data set?
no
Research Approach
Geographic Setting
Institutional Context
Certification Level
Programatic Focus
Research Location Context
- Multi-sited (across universities)
Preservice Participants
- undergraduate preservice teachers
Preservice Sample Size
34
Other Participant Data
Duration of Data Collection
Data Sources
- online discussions
- Transcriptions
- Writing Artifacts
Data Analysis Tools
- Analytic memos
- Inductive coding
Researcher Positionality
- A combination of their own students and students from other programs
Research Questions
What resources did preservice teachers turn to in order to support their claims about student writing and writers? (p. 18)
Is this research question explicit from the manuscript? Yes
As a community of practice, how often did they use these resources, and in what ways? (p. 18)
Is this research question explicit from the manuscript? Yes