Abstract
This paper explores the process through which a group of preservice early childhood/early childhood special education students examined their own beliefs about quality teaching and learning within the context of multiple practicum experiences in diverse settings. Students' reflections and actions are illuminated through a careful individual and cross-case analysis of field-based journals.
For these students, different instructional contexts provoked distinct questions. With increased experiences in early childhood settings, participants became more comfortable with the uncomfortable, considered that there are multiple ways to teach and learn, and realized that their own understandings of quality teaching must be informed by the children they teach. They also learned the process of using critical reflection to refine and adapt teaching practices to meet the needs of young learners continuously.
Findings from this study provide a window into the complex and individualized nature of new early childhood teachers' learning processes. By analyzing their journals, we were able to examine how these experiences move new teachers toward understanding concepts that are central to quality performance.
Acknowledgments
Many thanks to the members of the advanced research seminar in infancy and early childhood who contributed to our collective thinking in the early stages of this work: Ranita Cheruvu, Alexandra Figueras, Sarah Shimkunas, Vasiliki Stavropoulos, Gambi White-Tennant, and Ting Yuan, and to our participants in the Integrated Early Childhood Program from whom we are always learning about the complexity in quality teaching and teacher education.