This book explores teaching and learning in lower secondary classrooms in the three PISA domains science, mathematics and reading. Based on extensive video documentation from science, math and reading classrooms in Norwegian secondary schooling, it analyzes how offered and experienced teaching and learning opportunities in these three subject areas support students’ learning. The in-depth investigations of video documentation are combined with analysis of the Norwegian PISA results in order to understand how teaching and learning in science, mathematics and reading can be improved.   Recent reviews indicate that instructional practice does make a difference to students learning - and is more important than other factors including students’ socioeconomic background, class size, classroom climate, and teachers’ experience and formal training. This book opens the discussion on a European basis about contemporary challenges in teaching and learning in secondary schooling. Norway as a test bed is particularly interesting due to its long tradition with national curricula, and its unitary and non- streamed structure. Furthermore, ideas of educational progressivism and students’ active ways of working (such as individualized teaching, adapted teaching, inquiry based teaching etc.) have for a long time been actively promoted within Norwegian educational policies.   The book draws on analyses that combine expertise in psychometrics and video-based micro genetic classroom studies with expertise in domain-specific instruction (math, science and reading). It feeds the conversation how issues of communication patterns are dealt with and made productive within different instructional formats, and presents possibilities to compare and analyze instructional formats and discursive practices for students’ learning.​
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This book explores teaching and learning in lower secondary classrooms in the three PISA domains science, mathematics and reading.
Introduction: Kirsti Klette: Studying interaction and instructional patterns in classrooms.- Part  I Instruction matters.- Chapter 1: Kirsti Klette and Marianne Ødegaard: Instructional activities and discourse features in science classrooms: teachers talking and students listening or…?.- Chapter2: Øistein Anmarkrud: Inquisitor, evaluator or facilitator? Teachers’ use of instructional format during naturally occurring comprehension strategies instruction.- Chapter 3: Ole Kristian Bergem: “Usually we are not where the teacher is” Individualized teaching methods in mathematics classrooms.- Chapter 4: Emilia Anderson-Bakken and Kirsti Klette: Teachers’ use of questions and responses to students’ contributions during whole class discussions: comparing language arts and science classrooms.- Chapter5:      Astrid Roe: Teachers' contribution to students reading engagement and reading strategies.- Part  II Discourse matters.- Chapter 6: Marianne Ødegaard, Nina Arnesen and Kirsti Klette: Talk and use of language in the science classroom – characteristic features.- Chapter 7: Nina Arnesen: How students make meaning from a teaching sequence on a socio-scientific issue - a case study of meaning making in science.- Chapter 8: Ole Kristian Bergem and Kirsti Klette: Conversations as learning tools in mathematics: What do pupils actually learn?.- Part III Engagement matters.- Chapter 9: Ole Kristian Bergem: “I prefer to take one subject a day” Students’ working strategies during independent teaching sessions.- Chapter 10: Ole Kristian Bergem:“Mathematics is my favorite subject!” Variation in instructional practices boosting students’ attitudes towards mathematics.- Chapter11: Marianne Ødegaard: Teacher commitments - love and duty in science education.  
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Based on extensive video documentation from science, math and reading classrooms in Norwegian secondary schooling, this book explores teaching and learning in lower secondary classrooms in the three PISA domains science, mathematics and reading. It analyzes how offered and experienced teaching and learning opportunities in these three subject areas support students’ learning. The in-depth investigations of video documentation are combined with analysis of data from PISA and TIMSS in order to understand how teaching and learning in science, mathematics and reading can be improved. Recent reviews indicate that instructional practice does make a difference to students learning - and is more important than other factors including students’ socioeconomic background, class size, classroom climate, and teachers’ experience and formal training. This book opens the discussion on a European basis about contemporary challenges in teaching and learning in secondary schooling. Norway as a test bed is particularly interesting due to its long tradition with national curricula, and its unitary and non- streamed structure. Furthermore, ideas of educational progressivism and students’ active ways of working (such as individualized teaching, adapted teaching, inquiry based teaching etc.) have for a long time been actively promoted within Norwegian educational policies. The book draws on analyses that combine expertise in psychometrics and video-based micro genetic classroom studies with expertise in domain-specific instruction (math, science and reading). It feeds the conversation how issues of communication patterns are dealt with and made productive within different instructional formats, and presents possibilities to compare and analyze instructional formats and discursive practices for students’ learning. 
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Combines quantitative and qualitative analyses from studies of lower secundary schooling Provides unprecented insight of what goes on in classrooms through analyses from video documentation from classrooms Links instructional patterns with discursive features of teacher-student interaction
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9783319173016
Publisert
2015-08-13
Utgiver
Vendor
Springer International Publishing AG
Høyde
235 mm
Bredde
155 mm
Aldersnivå
Research, P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet