Understanding the Implication of Co-teaching in a Post-graduate Classroom
Author(s) -
Saroja Dhanapal,
Ravi Kanapathy
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
journal of education and training
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2330-9709
DOI - 10.5296/jet.v1i2.5762
Subject(s) - enthusiasm , post graduate , graduate students , teaching method , institution , medical education , psychology , mathematics education , perception , student teaching , pedagogy , teacher education , medicine , sociology , student teacher , social psychology , social science , neuroscience
Co-teaching has evolved rapidly as an innovative and potentially effective teaching strategy. Despite considerable enthusiasm expressed on co-teaching as a teaching strategy, the complexity of conceptualizing and studying collaboration at the post-graduate level is still at its infancy. The purpose of this research is to study the implication of co-teaching upon post-graduate students. Twenty-two full-time secondary school teachers who attended a masters’ program and the faculty members who taught them responded to surveys about their knowledge and comfort with co-teaching. Data was collected and analyzed qualitatively. The focus was to understand the perceptions of participants on co-teaching at the post-graduate level. These data was collaborated with video recording of the lessons, classroom observation by the researchers and a report written by a neutral observer for the institution. Findings indicate that co-teaching is a useful strategy for the post- graduate level despite the presence of challenges.
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