Professional Knowledge or Motivation? Investigating the Role of Teachers’ Expertise on the Quality of Technology-Enhanced Lesson Plans [Dataset]
收藏DataCite Commons2024-12-17 更新2025-04-16 收录
下载链接:
https://www.psycharchives.org/handle/20.500.12034/2300
下载链接
链接失效反馈官方服务:
资源简介:
In an expertise study with 94 mathematics teachers varying in their relative teacher expertise (i.e., student teachers, trainee teachers, in-service teachers), we examined effects of teachers' professional knowledge and motivational beliefs on their ability to integrate technology within a lesson plan scenario. Therefore, we assessed teachers' professional knowledge (i.e., content knowledge, pedagogical content knowledge, technological knowledge), and their motivational beliefs (i.e., self-efficacy, utility-value). Furthermore, teachers were asked to develop a lesson plan for introducing the Pythagorean theorem to secondary students. Lesson plans by advanced teachers (i.e., trainee teachers, in-service teachers) comprised higher levels of instructional quality and technology exploitation than the ones of novice teachers (i.e., pre-service teachers). The effect of expertise was mediated by teachers' perceived utility-value of educational technology, but not by their professional knowledge. These findings suggest that teachers’ motivational beliefs play a crucial role for effectively applying technology in mathematics instruction.
提供机构:
PsychArchives
创建时间:
2020-01-09



