翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Students' representative council
・ Students' resistance movement at Preparatoria 5 and 6 of Universidad Nacional Autonoma de México, 2005
・ Students' Society of McGill University
・ Student Sponsor Partners
・ Student Sponsorship Programme South Africa
・ Student Stop AIDS Campaign
・ Student strike of 1970
・ Student Struggle for Soviet Jewry
・ Student Studies
・ Student study service (Indonesia)
・ Student Success Act
・ Student Sustainable Farm at Rutgers
・ Student Switch Off
・ Student syndrome
・ Student teacher
Student teaching
・ Student team achievement division
・ Student Technologists and Entrepreneurs of the Philippines
・ Student television
・ Student television in the United Kingdom
・ Student Television Network
・ Student television station
・ Student Theatre at Glasgow
・ Student Times (UK paper)
・ Student Tour
・ Student transport
・ Student Transportation Inc.
・ Student union
・ Student Union (Michigan State University)
・ Student Union (Oklahoma State University)


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Student teaching : ウィキペディア英語版
Student teaching

Student teaching is a college-supervised instructional experience; usually the culminating course in a university or college undergraduate education or graduate school program leading to teacher education and certification. Examples of programs include Early Childhood (Birth-Grade 3), Middle Childhood (Grades 4-9), and Adolescence to Young Adult (Grades 7-12). It is required by those earning either a Bachelor of Education or Master of Education degree, as well as liberal arts Bachelor of Science or Bachelor of Arts degrees with a major in education.
Student teaching is required for students who are not yet certified to teach. It is different from a practicum, which is required when a student ''already'' holds certification to teach, yet wants a certificate extension to teach another area of specialization; they are both college-supervised field-based experiences.
The student teaching experience lasts about the length of a semester or quarter; long enough to fulfill the college’s assigned tasks. It is a paid internship. This experience gives the prospective teaching professional an opportunity to teach under the supervision of a permanently certified master teacher (see schoolmaster).
The student teacher is usually placed in a neighboring or participating school. The student teacher is monitored by the cooperating teacher from the school, as well as a supervisor through the college. The supervisor acts as a liaison between the cooperating teacher and the head of the college’s student teaching department.
The student teacher normally shadows the cooperating teacher for about one week, eventually gaining more responsibility in teaching the class as the days and weeks progress. Eventually, the student teacher will assume most of the teaching responsibilities for the class including class management, lesson planning, assessment, and grading. Thus, the student teacher is able to more fully experience the role of the teacher as the classroom teacher takes on the observation role in the class. There is sometimes a "phasing out" week when the student teacher returns the teaching role back to the regular teacher.
The supervisor, as well as cooperating teacher, monitor the progress of the student teacher throughout the experience, ensuring ''satisfactory'' work. A grade of ''Pass'' or ''Fail'' in student teaching, as well as satisfactory completion of a school's education program, is an indication as to whether the college recommends the student for certification to teach.
==Student teaching as a learning challenge==
Student teaching has been used as a challenge to foreign language learners to facilitate the integration of their language skills by placing them at the center of classroom activities.〔(Ogawa & Wilkinson - Let Your Students Teach Their Class (I-TESL-J) )〕
Student teaching philosophy has proven to be a decisive between the newer cohort of teachers, and older educators. Trained under differing teaching philosophies, both groups have a difference of opinion on instructional methodology. The two most prevalent teaching philosophies in America are called Modern teaching philosophy and Traditional teaching philosophy respectively. The former relies on inquiry-based instruction, while the later relies heavily on lecture-based teaching. The differing of philosophies is being seen at every rung of the educational ladder, from Pre-K to Collegiate instruction.
In describing the difference between the two methodologies, one can note characteristics that define them. In traditional teaching methods, there is a high emphasis on attending lectures, reading texts, and solving problems. In modern teaching approaches, there is a high premium put on developing one's unique knowledge through the pursuit of the scientific method, using such didactic methods as observation and hypothesis. 〔(Traditional Teaching Methods Vs. Teaching through the Application of Information )〕
Another hallmark of the modern teaching approach is the incorporation of technology, a highly useful skill that is required of most who intend on entering the job market in future years. 〔(Traditional Vs. Modern Teaching Methods: Advantages and Disadvantages )〕
Examples of technological inclusion within the classroom has become supported in many counties through the United States. Most schools are equipped with smart boards and include roaming laptop carts that allow all students, regardless of financial ability, gain experience with the technology that will make them successful in the next steps of their lives. 〔(Using the Technology of Today, in the Classroom of Today )〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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