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Featured researches published by Lee Rusznyak.


Education As Change | 2011

Lesson planning guidelines for student teachers: A scaffold for the development of pedagogical content knowledge

Lee Rusznyak; Elizabeth Walton

Abstract Lesson planning for student teachers is often regarded in technical terms, merely as the means to ensure effective classroom performance. This approach limits the possibilities that the process of lesson planning offers to the development of professional competence among student teachers. In particular, student teachers need to begin to develop their pedagogical content knowledge (PCK), the capacity to make pedagogical choices that are logically derived from content and contextual knowledge. This article reports on a Lesson Planning Guideline which is used to scaffold the construction of student teachers’ PCK individually by requiring them to consider the constituent parts of PCK individually and in relation to one another during the planning process. This guideline was developed in response to perceived limitations of existing guidelines used in our institution and found in texts for student teachers. Called a “Rationale for lesson design” the Guideline does not attempt to simplify the planning ...


Education As Change | 2009

Confronting the ‘pedagogical immunity’ of student teachers

Lee Rusznyak

Student teachers enter teacher education programmes with preconceptions about the nature of teaching that have developed in the course of the years they spent in classrooms as learners. The initial phase of teacher education is a complex process in which many student teachers have to unlearn preconceptions they hold about the nature of teaching that would otherwise constrain their development in learning to teach. This is particularly relevant in the South African context, where the education system has recently undergone radical and multi-faceted transformation. Student teachers do not always get the opportunity to observe supervising teachers modelling conceptually deep, enquiry-based teaching during their Teaching Experience (TE) sessions, so it is sometimes difficult for them to acquire a concept of the type of teaching that university tutors expect. This makes learning to teach particularly complex and challenging. This article reflects on the pedagogical development of a student teacher, Amos, over ...


International Journal of Disability Development and Education | 2017

Choices in the Design of Inclusive Education Courses for Pre-service Teachers: The Case of a South African University

Elizabeth Walton; Lee Rusznyak

Abstract It is expected that that pre-service teachers are adequately equipped to meet the needs of diverse students. This article discusses the choices that teacher educators must make in designing inclusive education courses. The first choice is whether inclusive education will be infused into the curriculum or presented as a stand-alone course. If the latter, the second decision is what determines the content of courses – teacher need, policy directives or the authority of the field where knowledge is produced. If teacher educators look to the field of knowledge production, they might choose among inclusive education as an issue of student diversity; teaching competence; and schools and societies. We animate these choices as we describe an inclusive education course taught in a South African university. Our conclusion suggests that pre-service teacher education for inclusive education would be strengthened by more critical appraisal of the assumptions and orientations informing the design of courses.


Education As Change | 2011

Learning to explain: How student teachers organise and present content knowledge in lessons they teach

Lee Rusznyak

Abstract The ability to organise content knowledge around key concepts is an essential part of what student teachers need to learn in order to teach effectively. This is particularly significant as South Africas education system emerges from policies which undervalued the role of content knowledge in teaching and teacher education. During sessions of practical teaching, university tutors have opportunities to observe how students understand content knowledge in ways that differ from their university coursework. Students’ understanding of content knowledge manifests in how they select and organise concepts, conduct explanations and respond to learners’ contributions. Lesson observation reports written by university tutors, as they observed student teaching, were scrutinised for comments that prompted student teachers to think about their understanding of content knowledge. A qualitative analysis of these comments shows how opportunities for learning are diminished when student teachers’ grasp of their les...


International Journal of Disability Development and Education | 2017

Could Practicum Placements in Contrasting Contexts Support the Preparation of Pre-Service Teachers for an Envisaged Inclusive Education System? A South African study

Lee Rusznyak; Elizabeth Walton

AbstractIn contexts where inclusive education is nascent, teacher educators face the challenge of preparing pre-service teachers for a system that does not yet exist. While this might be possible through university-based coursework, difficulties arise when so few sites that model inclusive pedagogies are available for practicum placements. This article investigates whether practicum placements in contrasting contexts may prepare pre-service teachers for teaching in an envisaged inclusive education system. We analyse the reflections of South African pre-service teachers who have conducted practicum sessions in two contrasting contexts, neither of which offered ideal models of inclusion. We explore the extent to which moving between contexts enabled pre-service teachers to develop orientations towards teaching and learning that Black-Hawkins and Florian identify as essential for promoting and sustaining inclusive pedagogic practices. With reservations, we conclude that practicum placements over contrasting ...


International Journal of Inclusive Education | 2014

Affordances and limitations of a special school practicum as a means to prepare pre-service teachers for inclusive education

Elizabeth Walton; Lee Rusznyak


Teaching and Teacher Education | 2013

Pre-service teachers' pedagogical learning during practicum placements in special schools

Elizabeth Walton; Lee Rusznyak


Education As Change | 2014

Using metaphors to gain insight into South African student teachers' initial and developing conceptions of ‘being a teacher’

Lee Rusznyak; Elizabeth Walton


Education As Change | 2014

Supporting student teachers through their first attempts at teaching: Possibilities and limitations afforded by school-based and campus-based models of support

Lee Rusznyak; Moeniera Moosa


Perspectives in Education | 2016

Approaches to assessing preservice teachers' learning in authentic and rigorous ways : the case of an inclusive education module

Elizabeth Walton; Lee Rusznyak

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Elizabeth Walton

University of the Witwatersrand

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Lungi Sosibo

Cape Peninsula University of Technology

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