Teachers and Teacher Candidates Learning Together: Reported Ideas Regarding a Co-Teaching Model

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.25071/1916-4467.40502

Keywords:

co-teaching, science inquiry, teacher education

Abstract

A recurring issue in science teacher education is how to support teachers using student-centred scientific inquiry projects. This study investigates the first year of a three-year project (Inquire Together) that aims to support teacher candidate/teacher mentor teams using student-centred scientific inquiry projects while co-teaching during practicum. Co-teaching involves two or more teachers working together, co-planning, co-instructing and co-reflecting, for the benefit of students and to support each other’s development as teachers. The steps in the first year of the Inquiry Together project involved the following: a) developing a co-teaching model for our practicum in a two-day workshop, follow up focus groups and interviews; b) modelling student-centred scientific inquiry opportunities for teacher candidates and teachers; and c) supporting two teacher candidate/teacher mentor co-teaching teams implementing this pedagogy with practicum classes. The Covid-19 pandemic led to co-teaching teams moving to online teaching part-way through practicum, and students continuing their projects at home. We used a case study approach to investigate the affordances and constraints of Inquire Together for supporting teachers using student-centred scientific inquiry projects. Data included video and audio recordings of the workshop, focus groups, interviews, co-teacher planning meetings, high school classes and co-teacher reflection meetings, as well as co-teachers’ unit and lesson plans and online communication. Our initial findings from thematic analysis indicate the importance of the following five elements: time together for co-teaching teams outside the classroom (for planning and reflection); co-teachers developing mutual understanding; making equity between co-teachers visible for students; communication; and both teachers’ engagement in all activities.

Author Biographies

Carol Rees, Thompson Rivers University

Carol Rees is an Associate Professor at Thompson Rivers University in BC. Her research interests include supporting student-centred scientific inquiry, teacher-student interactions and co-teaching. She is currently working on a three-year research study entitled “Supporting learner-centred pedagogy and dialogic teaching through coteaching” with Wolff-Michael Roth and Colette Murphy.

Rupinder Deol Kaur, Thompson Rivers University

Rupinder Deol Kaur is a research assistant at Thompson Rivers University. She has a masters in psychology and a masters in education. Her central interest is social and emotional learning.

Colette Murphy, Trinity College Dublin

Colette Murphy is an author of several books on co-teaching and she has delivered workshops worldwide. She is a professor at Trinity College Dublin, in Ireland. She is the director of the STEM centre there. She has been a teacher educator for 25 years. Her research centres on science learning and teaching, at all levels.

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Published

15-07-2020

How to Cite

Rees, C., Kaur, R. D., & Murphy, C. (2020). Teachers and Teacher Candidates Learning Together: Reported Ideas Regarding a Co-Teaching Model. Journal of the Canadian Association for Curriculum Studies, 18(1), 13–14. https://doi.org/10.25071/1916-4467.40502

Issue

Section

Collaborative Learning Journeys