İlköğretim Matematik Öğretmenliği Koleksiyonu

Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11779/1932

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Now showing 1 - 10 of 21
  • Conference Object
    Unconventional Thinking in Online Laboratory School: Fractions
    (PME, 2022) Kayıtmaz, Özlem; Pekkan, Zelha Tunç; Tunç-Pekkan, Zelha
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  • Book Part
    Yenilikçi Öğretim Yaklaşımları
    (Efe Akademi Yayınları, 2022) Birgili, Bengi
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  • Conference Object
    Preservice Teachers' Math Teaching Anxiety in an Online Laboratory School
    (2022) Ölmez, İbrahim Burak; Pekkan, Tunç Zelha; Taylan, Didem; Birgili, Bengi
    The purpose of this study was to examine preservice teachers’ math teaching anxiety, to explore the relationships between math teaching anxiety and several variables, and to understand how preservice teachers’ math teaching anxiety changed during eight-weeks of the Online Laboratory School (OLS) within a university. We administered the Math Teaching Anxiety scale with 14 items to 43 preservice teachers by adapting Hadley and Dorward’s (2011) scale. The results revealed that on average, preservice teachers had math teaching anxiety from “a little” to “a moderate amount” degree before the OLS and their math teaching anxiety did not significantly change during the OLS. Moreover, math teaching anxiety was only significantly correlated with the number of methods courses completed so far.
  • Article
    Teaching Method Preferences of Teachers: the Cooperative Teaching Method
    (James Nicholas Publishers, 2016) Birgili, Bengi; Kızıltepe, Zeynep; Seggie, Fatma Nevra
    Teachers’ preferred teaching methods are of the utmost importance. The aim of this qualitative study is to examine 47 primary and secondary-school teachers’ (1) teaching method preferences, (2) reasons for group work preferences, and (3) implementation paths for the methods they use. Results show that (1) teachers mostly prefer direct instruction; group work is the second preference; (2) permanent learning, physical conditions, and comprehensive programs are the result of the preference; (3) while teachers are implementing the cooperative method, they implement activities and projects at all levels, form the groups themselves based on students’ qualifications, and see the highest success in 4th, 6th, and 11th grades.
  • Conference Object
    Introduction To the Papers of Twg19: Mathematics Teachers and Classroom Practices
    (Dublin City Univ Glasnevin Campus, 2017) Mosvold, Reidar; Skott, Jeppe; Taylan, Rukiye Didem; Drageset, Ove Gunnar; Sakonidis, Charalampos
  • Conference Object
    Mathematics Teacher Education With University Within School Model and Flipped Classroom Technique
    (2016) Tunç-Pekkan, Zelha
    Abstract : I taught ‘Introduction to Mathematics Teaching course’ using Flipped classroom. This was the first time I used flipped classroom to teach this course. The main objective of the course was to introduce the ‘mathematics teaching’ profession to first year students and to have pre-service teachers some teaching experience with children. For this course, we also adapted University within School model, where we valued the experience of being at our work places which is ‘schools.’ MEF University adopted this model for the whole Faculty of Education. Flipped classroom technique was adopted university wide. Therefore, this course is unique that it connects both University within school model and flipped classroom method. In Flipped classroom, it is essential to use videos. Throughout 14 weeks of instruction, we had four main sources of videos: 1) videos that I created related to reading the book called ‘Empowering Beginning Middle School Teachers’ 2) pre-service teachers’ own created videos (related to their teaching of 6th grade students) 3) videos that I took last year during my own teaching of 5th grade mathematics classroom 4) YouTube videos from a well known mathematics educator, Jo Boaler- Stanford University, about mathematics education. In the presentation, I will discuss how we used the videos, what the benefits and disadvantages of using them are. Using University within School model, each pre-service teacher was assigned to a pair of students that they taught parallel concepts to the school mathematics. They had 8-weeks of one-to-one teaching for 2 hours per week. Related to pre-service teachers’ interactions with 6th grade students, they had weekly reflection journals which they answered structured questions. In the presentation, I will discuss the details of their journals and the feedbacks they gave about their experiences related to the foundations of this course.
  • Conference Object
    Influence of a Number Line Based Model of Instruction on 5th Grade Students’ Use of Mathematical Language During Clinical Interviews
    (2016) Taylan, Rukiye Didem; Tunç-Pekkan, Zelha; Birgili, Bengi; Aydın, Utkun; Özcan, Mustafa
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  • Conference Object
    Teaching Math in a Flipped Classroom Mode
    (2016) Tunç-Pekkan, Zelha
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  • Conference Object
    Improving Fifth Grade Students’ Fractional Knowledge Through University-School Partnership
    (2016) Aydın, Utkun; Birgili, Bengi; Tunç-Pekkan, Zelha; Taylan, Rukiye Didem; Özcan, Mustafa
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