Journal article
Emotional experiences of preservice science teachers in online learning: The formation, disruption and maintenance of social bonds
Cultural Studies of Science Education, Vol.11, pp.629-652
2016
Abstract
The enactment of learning to become a science teacher in online mode is an emotionally charged experience. We attend to the formation, maintenance and disruption of social bonds experienced by online preservice science teachers as they shared their emotional online learning experiences through blogs, or e-motion diaries, in reaction to videos of face-to-face lessons. A multi-theoretic framework drawing on microsociological perspectives of emotion informed our hermeneutic interpretations of students’ first-person accounts reported through an e-motion diary. These accounts were analyzed through our own database of emotion labels constructed from the synthesis of existing literature on emotion across a range of fields of inquiry. Preservice science teachers felt included in the face-to-face group as they watched videos of classroom transactions. The strength of these feelings of social solidarity were dependent on the quality of the video recording. E-motion diaries provided a resource for interactions focused on shared emotional experiences leading to formation of social bonds and the alleviation of feelings of fear, trepidation and anxiety about becoming science teachers. We offer implications to inform practitioners who wish to improve feelings of inclusion amongst their online learners in science education.
Details
- Title
- Emotional experiences of preservice science teachers in online learning: The formation, disruption and maintenance of social bonds
- Authors/Creators
- A. Bellocchi (Author/Creator) - Queensland University of TechnologyK.A. Mills (Author/Creator) - Queensland University of TechnologyS.M. Ritchie (Author/Creator) - Murdoch University
- Publication Details
- Cultural Studies of Science Education, Vol.11, pp.629-652
- Publisher
- Kluwer Academic Publishers
- Identifiers
- 991005543393407891
- Murdoch Affiliation
- School of Education
- Language
- English
- Resource Type
- Journal article
UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)
This output has contributed to the advancement of the following goals:
Source: InCites
Metrics
275 File views/ downloads
237 Record Views