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A critical incident study of preservice teachers' beliefs about teaching success and nonsuccess

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CONTRIBUTORS:
  Author Placek, J. H.
  Author Dodds, P.
JOURNAL:
  Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport (RQES), 59(4), 351 - 358.
YEAR: 1988
PUB TYPE: Journal Article
SUBJECT(S): physical-education; teacher-training; teacher; evaluation; attitude; psychology
DISCIPLINE: No discipline assigned
HTTP: https://secure.sportquest.com/su.cfm?articleno=232159&title=232159
LANGUAGE: English
PUB ID: 103-341-960 (Last edited on 2002/02/27 18:44:07 US/Mountain)
SPONSOR(S):
 
ABSTRACT:
Written critical incident descriptions were collected from prospective teachers to understand what they see as salient features of their own successful and nonsuccessful teaching. Researchers reliably extracted, sorted, and categorized these features from descriptions until categories for success and nonsuccess stabilized. 195 participants produced 300 nonsuccess (19 categories) and 413 success (20 categories) features, providing teacher educators with indirect evidence of things their students already have learned about teaching. Many success and nonsuccess features grouped around students (over half), teacher (about a third), learning tasks, and environment. The largest number of responses in a single category was student noncompliance (29.7% of all responses) in the nonsuccessful teaching dimension.
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