Purpose - Our purpose is to examine the outcomes of using video as a reflection tool in peer-to-peer coaching with rural teachers as part of a literacy coaching professional development project.Methodology/approach - This qualitative case study presents findings from a professional development project serving rural educators interested in becoming literacy coaches. Using a peer coaching model, literacy coaching participants video recorded two literacy coaching cycles capturing pre-conferencing, lesson modeling, and post-conferencing. Reflection was facilitated through face-to-face discussion and online technologies (discussion forums and e-mail).Findings - Face-to-face sessions were integral in fostering participant reflection. Technology challenges impacted the extent to which participants engaged in and valued video as a reflection tool. Participants repurposed video reflection for self-identified professional and pedagogical purposes.Practical implications - Video reflection can be used as a part of multimodal set of tools to collaborate with teachers. Face-to-face interaction is important in supporting rural teachers' use of video reflection. Teacher educators generally need more on-site authentic involvement to gain emic perspectives when working with the rural sites in order for the video tasks to be more effective and meaningful for the teachers. Repurposing video reflection can be an expression of agency in meeting teacher needs.
Spanning the distance: video reflection as a tool for cultivating literacy coaches in rural contexts
Literatuur
Auteur(s)
Franzak, Judith; Kim, Koomi; Fahrenbruck, Mary
Jaar
2015
Bron
VIDEO REFLECTION IN LITERACY TEACHER EDUCATION AND DEVELOPMENT: LESSONS FROM RESEARCH AND PRACTICE Volume: 5 Pages: 191-210