Inclusive Learning and Educational Equity 5
Fig. 10.5 The mind map of the tale presented for the co-teacher’s and first grade teacher’s pupils Fig. 10.6
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Fig. 10.5 The mind map of the tale presented for the co-teacher’s and first grade teacher’s pupils
Fig. 10.6 Co-teachers’ pupils’ answers on how they feel about the school tasks 10 Teaching for Diversity with UDL: Analysing Teacher Competence 258 In both years, over half of the pupils answered all the statements in a very posi- tive way. However, the number of pupils with a very positive attitude towards the enjoyable tasks at school reduced during the second grade. When asking if the pupils finish the tasks, the number of strongly negative answers increased slightly in the second grade. For the question on whether the pupil also does difficult tasks, two pupils answered that they do them only sometimes or never, in both year’s surveys. Both were pupils with SEN. Otherwise, all the most negative answers on all three questions were given by the same SEN pupils in both years. According to the co- teachers, these pupils did not have high esteem in regard to schooling. However, we may anticipate that their self-esteem is low partly because of inappropriate tasks. After the UDL lessons, the pupils from grades 1 and 3 (N = 37) answered a sur- vey through which they assessed their own working during the UDL lessons. For assessment, we constructed a questionnaire called ‘This is what I am as a learner’ based on the UDL principles ( Appendix 10.1 ). Three of the items were interlinked to the multiple means of representation, and their results are illustrated in Fig. 10.7 . When analysing, we combined the original five categories into three categories of answers of 1 – agree or almost agree, 2 – I don’t know and 3 – fairly disagree or disagree. In Fig. 10.7 , we can see that pupils’ experiences with the UDL lessons were mainly very positive. However, there were also pupils whose experiences of the UDL lessons were not so positive. There were three to five pupils who answered that they had not learned, had not understood the things to be learned or had experienced the lessons as boring. We analysed the connection between the different pupils’ answers with the Pearson’s correlation test (Rodgers & Nicewander, 1988 ). We found no statistically significant differences between the answers and the pupils’ support levels: there were pupils studying in every level of the three-tiered support (general, intensified and special support) who answered both positively and Fig. 10.7 Co-teachers’ and first grade pupils’ self-assessment of their learning after the UDL lessons S. Lakkala and O. Kyrö-Ämmälä 259 negatively (see Table 10.2 in Appendix 10.2 ). Furthermore, there were no statisti- cally significant differences as to whether a pupil was a first- or third-grader. Instead, we found a slight positive correlation between how excited a pupil was and how well she/he understood the things to be learned (r = 0.356*, p = 0.033). We assume that the positive correlation indicates the relevance of motivation. Download 5.65 Kb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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