How Teachers Would Spend Their Time Teaching Language Arts: The Mismatch Between Self-Reported and Best Practices

As teacher quality becomes a central issue in discussions of children’s literacy, both researchers and policy makers alike express increasing concern with how teachers structure and allocate their lesson time for literacy-related activities as well as with what they know about reading development, p...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of learning disabilities 2009-09, Vol.42 (5), p.418-430
Hauptverfasser: Cunningham, Anne E., Zibulsky, Jamie, Stanovich, Keith E., Stanovich, Paula J.
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container_end_page 430
container_issue 5
container_start_page 418
container_title Journal of learning disabilities
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creator Cunningham, Anne E.
Zibulsky, Jamie
Stanovich, Keith E.
Stanovich, Paula J.
description As teacher quality becomes a central issue in discussions of children’s literacy, both researchers and policy makers alike express increasing concern with how teachers structure and allocate their lesson time for literacy-related activities as well as with what they know about reading development, processes, and pedagogy. The authors examined the beliefs, literacy knowledge, and proposed instructional practices of 121 first-grade teachers. Through teacher self-reports concerning the amount of instructional time they would prefer to devote to a variety of language arts activities, the authors investigated the structure of teachers’ implicit beliefs about reading instruction and explored relationships between those beliefs, expertise with general or special education students, years of experience, disciplinary knowledge, and self-reported distribution of an array of instructional practices. They found that teachers’ implicit beliefs were not significantly associated with their status as a regular or special education teacher, the number of years they had been teaching, or their disciplinary knowledge. However, it was observed that subgroups of teachers who highly valued particular approaches to reading instruction allocated their time to instructional activities associated with other approaches in vastly different ways. It is notable that the practices of teachers who privileged reading literature over other activities were not in keeping with current research and policy recommendations. Implications and considerations for further research are discussed.
doi_str_mv 10.1177/0022219409339063
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subjects Activities
Arts
Attitude
Beliefs
Best practice
Child
Childrens Literature
Correlation
Culture
Data Collection
Disabilities
Education, Special - standards
Educational activities
Elementary education
Elementary School Teachers
Experts
General Education
Grade 1
Humans
Implicit beliefs
Inservice Training - standards
Knowledge Base for Teaching
Language Arts
Language Arts - standards
Language teaching methods
Learning disabilities
Linguistics - education
Literacy
Medium of instruction
Outcomes of Education
Phonics
Policy making
Preservice Teachers
Professional Competence - standards
Public Policy
Reading Instruction
Special education
Special Education Teachers
Special Needs Students
Student teacher relationship
Teacher Attitudes
Teacher Characteristics
Teacher Educators
Teacher Effectiveness
Teachers
Teaching
Teaching - standards
Teaching Experience
Teaching Methods
Time
Time Factors (Learning)
Time Management
Time use
United States
Urban Schools
title How Teachers Would Spend Their Time Teaching Language Arts: The Mismatch Between Self-Reported and Best Practices
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