TY - JOUR
T1 - Facilitating teachers’ talk about their understanding, experienced relevance and attitudes toward Lesson Study
AU - Uffen, Iris
AU - Vries, Siebrich de
AU - Goei, Sui Lin
AU - Verhoef, Nellie
AU - Amsing, Hilda
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025, Iris Uffen, Siebrich de Vries, Sui Lin Goei, Nellie Verhoef and Hilda Amsing.
PY - 2025/4/28
Y1 - 2025/4/28
N2 - Purpose: This study explores how Lesson Study (LS) facilitators can support teachers’ talk, within teams of novices, to encourage them to share their understanding of LS, their experienced relevance of what they intend to learn during LS and their attitudes toward LS. For this study, the subject of such talk is “consumption,” a concept linked closely to cultural–historical activity theory. By investigating how often talk about consumption transpires, this study also specifies how facilitators prompt or impede it. Design/methodology/approach: A qualitative multiple-case study approach analyzes talk about consumption during the “study,” “plan” and “reflect” phases of LS. Five cross-curricular and facilitated LS teams from one pre-vocational secondary school participated. Findings: Relevance, followed by understanding and attitude, was most discussed during the “study” phase of the LS cycle. Talk about consumption rarely occurred during other phases, and it remained superficial. Facilitators took a procedural approach to conducting the LS and lacked focus on teachers’ professional development; they also did not explore teachers’ talk. Practical implications: The findings are of particular interest to developers of LS facilitation training; they stress the need for facilitators to discuss the rationale underlying LS and its specific features, to make its relevance explicit to all teachers and discuss teachers’ attitudes toward LS. Originality/value: Although LS research recognizes the importance of consumption-related aspects, it has not studied them empirically. This study is among the first to investigate how these topics can be facilitated during LS meetings.
AB - Purpose: This study explores how Lesson Study (LS) facilitators can support teachers’ talk, within teams of novices, to encourage them to share their understanding of LS, their experienced relevance of what they intend to learn during LS and their attitudes toward LS. For this study, the subject of such talk is “consumption,” a concept linked closely to cultural–historical activity theory. By investigating how often talk about consumption transpires, this study also specifies how facilitators prompt or impede it. Design/methodology/approach: A qualitative multiple-case study approach analyzes talk about consumption during the “study,” “plan” and “reflect” phases of LS. Five cross-curricular and facilitated LS teams from one pre-vocational secondary school participated. Findings: Relevance, followed by understanding and attitude, was most discussed during the “study” phase of the LS cycle. Talk about consumption rarely occurred during other phases, and it remained superficial. Facilitators took a procedural approach to conducting the LS and lacked focus on teachers’ professional development; they also did not explore teachers’ talk. Practical implications: The findings are of particular interest to developers of LS facilitation training; they stress the need for facilitators to discuss the rationale underlying LS and its specific features, to make its relevance explicit to all teachers and discuss teachers’ attitudes toward LS. Originality/value: Although LS research recognizes the importance of consumption-related aspects, it has not studied them empirically. This study is among the first to investigate how these topics can be facilitated during LS meetings.
KW - Cultural–historical activity theory
KW - Facilitation
KW - Lesson Study
KW - Teacher learning
KW - Teachers’ professional development
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105003925992
U2 - 10.1108/IJLLS-07-2024-0145
DO - 10.1108/IJLLS-07-2024-0145
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105003925992
SN - 2046-8253
VL - 14
SP - 17
EP - 30
JO - International Journal for Lesson and Learning Studies
JF - International Journal for Lesson and Learning Studies
IS - 5
ER -