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Critical Incident Reflection:

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Title: Critical Incident Reflection:


1
Critical Incident Reflection
  • Engaging the Souls of Pre-Service Teachers

2
Reflective Teachers
  • Are open-minded
  • Are Responsible
  • Approach teaching with wholehearted enthusiasm
  • Are active learners who are able to make good
    choices and decisions about and within their
    practice.
  • Are able to learn from what they do as they do
    it.
  • Are open to growth and introspection
  • Are life long learners

3
Pre-Service Teachers
  • Are newly evolving professionals without a large
    base of practical experience.
  • Rely on their own assumptions, conceptions,
    beliefs, dispositions and capabilities which they
    bring to the teaching experience (Zeichner and
    Gore (1990)
  • Are focused on responding to supervisors
    emphasis on acquisition of new technical skills
  • Are learning to survive in the classroom
  • Are confronted by the reality of challenging
    student behaviors that test self concept and
    confidence
  • Come to teaching with narrow perspectives bounded
    by their own educational experience and cultural
    ecology. Gould (2000)

4
Why Use Critical Incident Reflection?
  • Provides an opportunity for teachers to clarify
    or reframe some misguided or preconceived ideas
    about students, learning and the teaching
    process.
  • Provides an opportunity to use examples from
    their own practice to become aware of their
    values and beliefs
  • Provides a deeper and more profound level of
    reflection because it goes beyond a detailed
    description on an event to analysis and
    reflection on meaning
  • Allows teachers to identify underlying
    assumptions that directed their actions
  • Helps teachers connect theory to practice through
    use of authentic settings
  • Small group and online dialogue helps students
    share their points of view in a manner that
    enriches and expands internal conversations
  • Helps students better understand and participate
    in the social rubric of the school.

5
What is a Critical Incident?
  • An interpretation of the significance of an
    event. To explore a teaching event as a critical
    incident is a value judgment, and the basis of
    that judgment is the significance attached to the
    meaning of the incident. Critical incidents are
    created or produced by the way we look at a
    situation. Tripp (1993)

6
  • Critical incidents are often not dramatic or
    obvious they are mostly straight forward
    accounts of very commonplace events that occur in
    routine professional practice which are critical
    in the rather different sense that they are
    indicative of underlying trends, motives, and
    structures. These incidents may appear to be
    typical rather than critical at first sight,
    but are rendered critical through analysis
    Tripp (1993)

7
Critical Incidents Defined
  • Critical incidents do not need to be monumental
    or turning point events. They can re relatively
    minor incidents---everyday events that happen in
    every school and in every classroom. Ainscow
    (2000)
  • Events attain criticality via the
    justification, the significance, and the meaning
    given to them by participants. Roach and
    Kratochwill (2004)

8
The Definition We Used
  • A critical incident can come from your
    observation in the classroom, school lunch room,
    the teachers lounge or the hallways of your
    student teaching placement. I t may involve a
    major behavioral issue with a student or between
    students, yourself and or your supervising
    teacher. It could just as easily be an everyday
    event or occurrence. Events attain
    criticality via the justification, the
    significance, and the meaning given to them by
    participants Roach(2004). When something occurs
    in the classroom or the student teaching
    experience that intrigues the observer, it should
    be recorded as a critical incident.

9
Experiential Learning Cycle (Kolb)
Concrete Experience
10
Kolbs Four Step Model
  • Concrete Experience, is purely descriptive words
    (who, hat, where, when, how many, etc), describe
    the significant event that occurred. This part
    should read like the opening paragraph of a news
    article.

11
Step 2 and 3, 4
  • Reflective Observation, Write about the feelings
    and emotions you (and others) experienced about
    this event. This part deals with the affective
    component of the event.
  • Abstract Conceptualization, In this part, state
    what conclusions you have drawn from what you
    described in the first and second step. State
    what you learned about yourself and/or others in
    this part.
  • Active Experimentation How will your experience
    in this incident influence or impact your future
    actions.

12
Three levels of Reflection
  • Technical reflection, relates to the effective
    application of skills and technical knowledge in
    the classroom setting (pre-service and new
    teachers)
  • Contextual, concerns reflection about the
    assumptions underlying specific classroom
    practices and consequences of practice
  • Dialectical, involves the asking of questions
    about moral, ethical or socio-political issues.
    LaBoskey (1993)

13
Our Assignment, Part 1
  • Students fill out a form with these questions,
    then share their incidents in small groups. They
    also turn in a copy to the instructor for
    comments. They are encouraged to write
    observations and remarks on the form in response
    to questions and comments from group members.
    Small group decides on one of the critical
    incidents to be used in part 2 of the assignment.
  • What happened?
  • How do/did I feel about what happened?
  • What were my actions/approaches?
  • How did my knowledge/skill influence what
    happened?
  • What else would I like to learn?
  • How would that inform my future decisions and
    actions?
  • What did I learn about myself?

14
Assignment, Part 2
  • Students post critical incident chosen by small
    group to large group discussion board. Student
    posting the incident answers the following
    questions when posting incident. In addition,
    members of class are required to post a
    meaningful response to at least three of the
    postings.
  • 1. A brief description of the critical incident
  • 2. Whose interests were served or denied by the
    actions of this critical incident?
  • What power relationships between principal,
    teachers, and students were expressed in this
    incident?
  • What did you learn that would affect he outcome
    of a similar incident in the future?
  • What questions do you have?

15
Assignment, Part 3
  • Critical Incident Reflection Analysis (to by
    administered during the last session of class
    when students review all of the incidents they
    have submitted)
  • 1. Can you identify a common theme running
    through your Critical Incident reports, if you
    addressed multiple issues list discuss those.
  • Did you notice patterns of your teaching behavior
    that you want to keep? What are those behaviors?
    Did you notice teaching patterns that your would
    prefer to change? Which behaviors?
  • Examine you Critical Incidents across the ten
    weeks, reflect on your development as a teacher
    over this period of time.
  • As you review your teaching practices, to what
    extent were you able to translate what you
    learned in your coursework into practice?
  • What changes would you make in the Critical
    Incident assignment to increase the meaning and
    value it had for you.

16
Examples of Experiences
  • My supervising teacher takes over every time I
    establish a relationship with a student.
  • I needed to physically manage a student
  • My student had a contagious disease and the
    principal refused to send him home
  • A students father hit the principal during a
    manifestation determination hearing.
  • I made a breakthrough.
  • Student wont work, calls me names
  • Two students started a fight.
  • Student, threw soda, then bit me.
  • I held a class meeting and it went very well.
  • I had to take over the lesson

17
Feelings About What Happened
  • Frustrated because I couldnt get him to comply
    before the behavior escalated
  • Disappointed because I couldnt follow through
    with the time-out because of the physical part.
  • I was dumb struck. I cant believe the school
    doesnt have some sort of policy on this.
  • I was afraid that I would not be able to get to
    him in the locked bathroom.
  • puts me in a position of not knowing what to do
    because either way I feel I fail
  • I was very unsure about the situation.
  • I was shocked.
  • I was unsure of what to do in class
  • I feel really good about helping this student.
  • I was stunned. I wasnt sure of the correct
    procedure on how to handle the situation. I felt
    helpless, uninformed and unprepared to handle a
    situation like that.
  • My CPI training went out the window, instead of
    leaning in to get him to let go, I just took the
    pain.

18
Some Conclusions
  • Pre-service teachers were diligent about
    recording and reflecting on critical incidents
  • Many were not able to see the in depth
    ramifications and implications of the incident,
    but relied on surface explanations. Didnt seem
    able to take it to the next step.
  • Pre-service teachers often described their
    feelings via student feelings.. I felt sad for
    him, I felt frustrated for her because she
    didnt remember the words.
  • Students often reported what they observed or
    were part of, in situations where they had little
    influence or control.
  • Pre-teachers found it difficult to connect
    information and strategies in class with actual
    events.
  • Pre-service teachers did a good job of reviewing
    their critical incidents to determine which
    teaching behaviors they wanted to keep or
    improve.
  • Instructors discovered more about the job of
    surviving a pre-service teacher field assignment
    resulting in some changes in seminar curriculum.
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