The Role of Personal Beliefs in the Evaluation of Pre-service Teachers’ Lesson Plans – A Single Case Study
Daniel C. Moos *
Department of Education, Gustavus Adolphus College, 800 West College Avenue, Saint Peter, MN, 56082, USA.
Amanda Miller
Department of Education, Gustavus Adolphus College, 800 West College Avenue, Saint Peter, MN, 56082, USA.
*Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Abstract
Aims: This study examined the relationship between personal beliefs and views of instructional practice.
Study Design: Anon-experimental quantitative mixed methods research design was used.
Place and Duration of Study: Research setting at Gustavus Adolphus College (St. Peter, MN, USA). Participants individually completed the study during the spring of 2012.
Methodology: Thirty-three pre-service teachers completed a self-report questionnaire and thought aloud as they evaluated two lesson plans.
Results: Two dimensions of epistemological beliefs significantly predicted participants’ views of constructivist teaching, R2=.25, F(1,32)=4.927, p=.014. Additionally, participants’ evaluation of how a lesson plan supports self-regulated learning was significantly predicted by constructivist views, R2=.14, F(1,29)=4.575, p=.04.Lastly, the evaluation of the student-centered nature of a lesson plan was significantly predicted by more traditional views, R2=.14, F(1, 29)=4.575, p=.04.
Conclusion: Participants with stronger constructivist views of teaching made significantly more evaluations based on the lesson plan’s support of self-regulated learning. Additionally, stronger traditional views were related to fewer evaluations on the student-centered nature of the lesson plan. Thus, differences in lesson plan evaluations can be explained by pre-service teachers’ personal beliefs.
Keywords: Self-regulated learning, epistemology, personal beliefs, pre-service teacher education, think-aloud