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The effectiveness of a special school experience for improving preservice teachers’ efficacy to teach children with special educational needs and disabilities

Increasingly, preservice teachers are required to demonstrate their ability to effectively cater for the needs of a diverse range of learners, including those with special educational needs and disabilities (SEND). Higher Education Institutions (HEI) delivering teacher education programmes are respo...

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Main Authors: Janine Coates, Jo Harris, Michael Waring
Format: Default Article
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/2134/11830290.v1
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author Janine Coates
Jo Harris
Michael Waring
author_facet Janine Coates
Jo Harris
Michael Waring
author_sort Janine Coates (3089055)
collection Figshare
description Increasingly, preservice teachers are required to demonstrate their ability to effectively cater for the needs of a diverse range of learners, including those with special educational needs and disabilities (SEND). Higher Education Institutions (HEI) delivering teacher education programmes are responsible for promoting the development of inclusive practices. This multi-method study assessed the effectiveness of a special school experience offered to preservice teachers at one HEI in England, UK to develop their self-efficacy for teaching in inclusive environments, including their knowledge, understanding and practices surrounding inclusion. A total population sample of forty-eight preservice teachers completed self-efficacy questionnaires at three timepoints during their training; and 13 took part in qualitative semi-structured interviews toward the end of the study. ANOVA findings from the questionnaire data showed the experience had a significant positive impact on preservice teacher self-efficacy, improving knowledge, understanding and confidence to teach inclusively. A thematic analysis of the qualitative findings revealed the experience challenged preservice teacher expectations about learners with SEND, developing understanding about learner needs and effective differentiation. This paper concludes with recommendations for effective inclusion training for preservice teachers.
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spelling rr-article-118302902020-03-02T00:00:00Z The effectiveness of a special school experience for improving preservice teachers’ efficacy to teach children with special educational needs and disabilities Janine Coates (3089055) Jo Harris (1251642) Michael Waring (1250268) Other education not elsewhere classified Initial teacher education Inclusion Inclusive education Differentiation Education Increasingly, preservice teachers are required to demonstrate their ability to effectively cater for the needs of a diverse range of learners, including those with special educational needs and disabilities (SEND). Higher Education Institutions (HEI) delivering teacher education programmes are responsible for promoting the development of inclusive practices. This multi-method study assessed the effectiveness of a special school experience offered to preservice teachers at one HEI in England, UK to develop their self-efficacy for teaching in inclusive environments, including their knowledge, understanding and practices surrounding inclusion. A total population sample of forty-eight preservice teachers completed self-efficacy questionnaires at three timepoints during their training; and 13 took part in qualitative semi-structured interviews toward the end of the study. ANOVA findings from the questionnaire data showed the experience had a significant positive impact on preservice teacher self-efficacy, improving knowledge, understanding and confidence to teach inclusively. A thematic analysis of the qualitative findings revealed the experience challenged preservice teacher expectations about learners with SEND, developing understanding about learner needs and effective differentiation. This paper concludes with recommendations for effective inclusion training for preservice teachers. 2020-03-02T00:00:00Z Text Journal contribution 2134/11830290.v1 https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/The_effectiveness_of_a_special_school_experience_for_improving_preservice_teachers_efficacy_to_teach_children_with_special_educational_needs_and_disabilities/11830290 CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
spellingShingle Other education not elsewhere classified
Initial teacher education
Inclusion
Inclusive education
Differentiation
Education
Janine Coates
Jo Harris
Michael Waring
The effectiveness of a special school experience for improving preservice teachers’ efficacy to teach children with special educational needs and disabilities
title The effectiveness of a special school experience for improving preservice teachers’ efficacy to teach children with special educational needs and disabilities
title_full The effectiveness of a special school experience for improving preservice teachers’ efficacy to teach children with special educational needs and disabilities
title_fullStr The effectiveness of a special school experience for improving preservice teachers’ efficacy to teach children with special educational needs and disabilities
title_full_unstemmed The effectiveness of a special school experience for improving preservice teachers’ efficacy to teach children with special educational needs and disabilities
title_short The effectiveness of a special school experience for improving preservice teachers’ efficacy to teach children with special educational needs and disabilities
title_sort effectiveness of a special school experience for improving preservice teachers’ efficacy to teach children with special educational needs and disabilities
topic Other education not elsewhere classified
Initial teacher education
Inclusion
Inclusive education
Differentiation
Education
url https://hdl.handle.net/2134/11830290.v1