Fostering pre-service physics teachers’ diagnostic skills and readiness through video vignettes and micro-teaching sessions: An exploratory single-case study

A primary duty for physics teachers is to provide students with opportunities to engage in subject-specific learning processes. Such processes are always accompanied by students’ (mis)conceptions. Consequently, diagnosing students’ conceptions is a daily, essential, and challenging task for physics...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of physics. Conference series Vol. 2950; no. 1; pp. 12042 - 12051
Main Authors Krumphals, Ingrid, Sebastian Feser, Markus
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Bristol IOP Publishing 01.02.2025
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Summary:A primary duty for physics teachers is to provide students with opportunities to engage in subject-specific learning processes. Such processes are always accompanied by students’ (mis)conceptions. Consequently, diagnosing students’ conceptions is a daily, essential, and challenging task for physics teachers. Prospective physics teachers should, therefore, receive appropriate preparation regarding this task during their university-based teacher education. To meet this requirement, we developed a course for Austrian pre-service physics teachers that incorporates the usage of video vignettes and micro-teaching sessions as learning arrangements to enhance participants’ diagnostic skills. Within the present study, we followed a single case study design to explore if and to which extent the self-confidence in diagnosing students’ conceptions of pre-service physics teachers who participated in this course changed over time. Our data analysis revealed mixed findings, as our participants showed increases, decreases, and U-shaped change-patterns regarding their self-confidence in diagnosing students’ conceptions. These findings indicate that participating in our developed course may have highly diverging effects on different pre-service physics teachers.
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ISSN:1742-6588
1742-6596
DOI:10.1088/1742-6596/2950/1/012042