Three Durable Practices for Approaching Video as a Reflective Tool: From Siloed to Connected Cultures in Educator Preparation
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Published:2015
Ralph A. Córdova, Ann Taylor, Michelle Whitacre, Nancy Singer, Karen Cummings, Stephanie Koscielski, 2015. "Three Durable Practices for Approaching Video as a Reflective Tool: From Siloed to Connected Cultures in Educator Preparation", Video Research in Disciplinary Literacies
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Abstract
University methods instructors emerging from disciplinary silos (art, English, mathematics, science, and foreign language) co-created a seminar to support candidates’ using video reflection. They explored how the Inquiry into My Practice protocol (IMP) could be used as a vehicle to surface Three Durable Practices critical for educators: intentional collaboration, instruction, and reflection.
Grounded in an interactional ethnographic perspective, this analysis draws on two telling cases to examine how the faculty team and teacher candidates co-constructed an intentional ethnographic learning community using physical and video-based practices (TeachingChannel.org).
Three Durable Practices came to life in the IMP, and through this shared and coherent conceptual approach, candidates made visible their process for bridging the disconnected worlds of theory and practice as they took up video analysis of their teaching.
Orienting across disciplinary boundaries to a shared conceptual language with associated protocols, faculty and candidates are afforded approaches to navigate their face-to-face and virtual worlds of practice.
