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Content of the written reflection of a future mathematics teacher

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Resumo:Professional reflection plays a central role in the construction and development of the professional knowledge of teachers and future teachers. For the authors of this paper, reflection is understood as a mental process of trying to structure or restructure an experience, a problem, or existing knowledge, leading to an understanding of the said, and constituting a continuous process of analysis and refinement of practice, in which the recursive character and cyclical nature briefly define the way it takes place. It is important, then, that teachers or prospective teachers engage in systematic reflection that is integrated into their daily practice. It is accepted that reflection gains strength when mediated by writing. Therefore, it is important to understand what teachers and future teachers reflect upon and create conditions that allow them to improve/deepen the reflective process. It is in this context that the study presented in this paper emerges. It is contextualized in the Final Internship Report of the Master's Degree in Primary and Middle School Teaching in the School of Education of Bragança, prepared and publicly defended by a future teacher. The study focuses on the content analysis of the written reflections on a teaching and learning experience (TLE) carried out in the mathematics classroom on the topic of "Data organization and processing". In this analysis, we sought to understand the incidence of reflection in the three stages of teaching practice, giving rise to the defined three categories and several subcategories of analysis: (i) Planning the TLE (what did you think of doing?); (ii) Development of the TLE (what happened in the classroom?); and (iii) Learning achieved in the TLE (what is the balance to be made?). In the written reflections, the future teacher revealed, for example, her concerns about creating stimulating learning contexts for her students, the relevance of her students' performance assessment practices, the diversification of her students' ways of working, the importance of developing positive attitudes towards mathematics or the projection of future work to be developed.
Autores principais:Pires, Manuel Vara
Outros Autores:Martins, Cristina; Sousa, João Sérgio Carvalho
Assunto:Reflection on practice Written reflection Reflection content
Ano:2021
País:Portugal
Tipo de documento:comunicação em conferência
Tipo de acesso:acesso aberto
Instituição associada:Instituto Politécnico de Bragança
Idioma:inglês
Origem:Biblioteca Digital do IPB
Descrição
Resumo:Professional reflection plays a central role in the construction and development of the professional knowledge of teachers and future teachers. For the authors of this paper, reflection is understood as a mental process of trying to structure or restructure an experience, a problem, or existing knowledge, leading to an understanding of the said, and constituting a continuous process of analysis and refinement of practice, in which the recursive character and cyclical nature briefly define the way it takes place. It is important, then, that teachers or prospective teachers engage in systematic reflection that is integrated into their daily practice. It is accepted that reflection gains strength when mediated by writing. Therefore, it is important to understand what teachers and future teachers reflect upon and create conditions that allow them to improve/deepen the reflective process. It is in this context that the study presented in this paper emerges. It is contextualized in the Final Internship Report of the Master's Degree in Primary and Middle School Teaching in the School of Education of Bragança, prepared and publicly defended by a future teacher. The study focuses on the content analysis of the written reflections on a teaching and learning experience (TLE) carried out in the mathematics classroom on the topic of "Data organization and processing". In this analysis, we sought to understand the incidence of reflection in the three stages of teaching practice, giving rise to the defined three categories and several subcategories of analysis: (i) Planning the TLE (what did you think of doing?); (ii) Development of the TLE (what happened in the classroom?); and (iii) Learning achieved in the TLE (what is the balance to be made?). In the written reflections, the future teacher revealed, for example, her concerns about creating stimulating learning contexts for her students, the relevance of her students' performance assessment practices, the diversification of her students' ways of working, the importance of developing positive attitudes towards mathematics or the projection of future work to be developed.