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Mentoring Teacher-research

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Saved by Richard Smith
on January 2, 2022 at 3:08:03 am
 

 

 


 

Session Title: 

 

Mentoring Teacher-research

 

 


 


 

Abstract:  

 

Resources on classroom-based research are now easily available but how to facilitate teacher-research has been relatively neglected. This EVO session aims to develop a community of teacher-research mentors and to provide guidance to enable mentors and prospective mentors to play what can be a pivotal role in supporting teacher-research.

 


 

Target audience:

 

  • Teacher educators, teacher development group leaders etc. who are currently mentoring teachers or student-teachers to do research into their classroom practice
  • Intending or past mentors of teacher-research who want to know more about the process before they begin (again)
  • Curious but undecided potential teacher-research mentors who want to know more about what’s involved before they decide

 

Participants may also be:

 

  • Decision-makers, administrators, school leaders, teacher educators or group leaders wondering whether to initiate and/or design a programme to encourage teacher-research

 


 

Session objectives: 

 

Participants will be engaged in the following activities:

 

  • Sharing ideas about the nature of mentoring and what mentoring teacher-research might specifically need to involve
  • Peer-coaching enabling participants to practise / reflect on teacher-research mentoring skills 
  •  A planning task involving consideration of who to mentor and establishment of a timeline and plan for effective communications

 

We also focus on the following stages of teacher-research mentoring, engaging participants in practical activities relating to each of them. 

 

  • Helping teachers to select a topic 
  • Guiding teachers to develop research questions
  • Preparing teachers to collect data
  • Guiding teachers to analyse and interpret data
  • Supporting teachers to plan and evaluate change
  • Helping teachers to share and reflect on their research 

 

The syllabus and practical activities are based on the British Council publication, Mentoring Teachers to Research Their Classrooms. Itself based on practical experience in Latin America and South Asia, this will be complemented by questions and insights from participants themselves in relation to their own experiences.

 

Finally, we encourage teacher-research mentors to continue to link up internationally, and we indicate resources and possibilities for follow-up. 

 


 

Syllabus:

 

Note: all webinars begin at 14:30 UTC - find out what time this is where you are here.

 


 

Week 1: (January 10 - 16) 

 

What does teacher-research mentoring involve?  / Webinar – Sun. Jan. 10, 14:30 (UTC)

 

  • Sharing of teacher-research and teacher-research mentoring experiences among participants 
  • Discussion of why mentoring is important for supporting teacher-research 
  • Sharing ideas about the nature of mentoring and what mentoring teacher-research specifically needs to involve 

 


 

Week 2: (January 17 - 23)

 

Developing topics and questions Webinar – Sun Jan 17, 14:30 (UTC)

 

  • Helping teachers to select a topic 
  • Guiding teachers to develop research questions

 


 

Week 3: (January 24 - 30)

 

Supporting data collection, analysis and interpretation / Webinar – Sun Jan 24,14:30 (UTC)

 

  • Preparing teachers to collect data
  • Guiding teachers to analyse and interpret data

 


 

Week 4: (January 31 - February 6)

 

Making a mentoring plan – and guiding teachers to plan and evaluate change / Webinar 4 – Sun Jan. 31, 14:30 (UTC)

 

  • A planning task involving consideration of who to mentor and establishment of a timeline and effective communications 
  • Supporting teachers to plan and evaluate change

 


 

Week 5: (February 7 - 13)

 

Helping teachers to share and reflect on their research / Webinars – Sun Feb 7, 14:30 (UTC) & Sat. Feb 13, 14:30 (UTC)

 

  • Helping teachers to share and reflect on their research 
  • Wrap-up, taking things further, and evaluation of the EVO

 

 


 

Media: 

 

 


 


 

Sponsor(s): 

 

IATEFL Research SIG


 

Join this session

 

Registration starts on Jan 2, 2022.

 

 

 

Subscribe to the Mentoring Teacher-research EVO

 

 

 

To register for this EVO, please join https://groups.io/g/Mentoring-TR  by January 9th. Enter https://groups.io/g/Mentoring-TR  This is a group discussion space, where you'll be invited to introduce yourself and where details will be provided about our first online session together on Sunday January 10th at 14:30 (UTC). 

 

If you are a teacher interested in getting involved in researching your practice ('doing' teacher-research) for the first time, consider joining the 'Classroom-based research for professional development' EVO rather than this 'Mentoring teacher-research' EVO, which is for existing and prospective mentors.

 

 

 

Moderators: 

 

 

Name (last, first)

Email address

Location 
(country of residence)

Biodata 
(max. 50 words) 
 

Photo

 

Smith, Richard

 

r.c.smith@warwick.ac.uk

 

UK

 

Prof Richard Smith has worked as a teacher educator for almost twenty-five years, the last twenty of them in the UK at the University of Warwick. He is the co-founder and former co-ordinator (2008–18) of the Teaching English in Large Classes research and development network (TELCnet), former co-ordinator of the IATEFL Research SIG (2011–15) and founder and chair of the steering committee of the International Festival of Teacher-research in ELT (2017, 2021). He has published widely on topics ranging from teacher-research to the history of language learning and teaching, and has worked with teachers from many countries, both directly and as academic adviser to teacher-research mentoring schemes in Latin America and South Asia. For his publications and further information see http://warwick.ac.uk/richardcsmith

 

 

 

Eraldemir Tuyan, Seden

 

sedentuyan@gmail.com

 

Turkey


Dr Seden Eraldemir Tuyan 
is 

lecturer in the Department of English Language Teaching at Çağ University, Mersin, Turkey, and is interested in psychological perspectives on ELT, including individual learner differences in language learning, motivation, learner autonomy and beliefs. She has published articles on various aspects of affect in foreign language learning. Her major interests are Emotional Intelligence, Social-Emotional Learning, individual differences in SLA, Action Research, and personal and professional development.

 

 

Primary Contact: (just one, please): 

 

Richard Smith (R.C.Smith@warwick.ac.uk)

 


 

 

 

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