| dc.description.abstract |
microteaching models in enhancing the science teaching efficacy of selected
Ghanaian female preservice teachers. A comparative research design with purposive
(criterion-based) sampling was used to select two intact classes comprising fifty-six
(56) second-year Early Grade preservice teachers from the Presbyterian Women’s
College of Education, Aburi. Participants were assigned to two treatment groups:
collaborative peer microteaching and video-based microteaching, with twenty-eight
(28) participants in each group. Over a period of six weeks, participants engaged in
their respective microteaching sessions. Data was collected using the Science
Teaching Efficacy Beliefs Instrument (STEBI-B), the Perception of the Collaborative
Peer Microteaching Model (PCPM) questionnaire, and a focus group interview. The
STEBI-B was administered as a pre-intervention and post-intervention assessment to
measure science teaching efficacy before and after the interventions. Paired-sample ttests
showed significant improvements in STEBI-B scores for both the collaborative
peer group (t(27) = −3.167, p = 0.004 < .05) and the video-based group (t(27) =
−7.906, p = 0.000 < .05), with the larger t-value indicating that the video-based
microteaching model was comparatively more effective. An analysis of covariance
(ANCOVA) further confirmed that when the collaborative peer and video-based
microteaching groups’ pre-intervention STEBI-B assessments are controlled, the
video-based microteaching was comparatively more effective in enhancing female
preservice teachers’ levels of science teaching efficacy. A two-way ANCOVA also
revealed that age, prior teaching experiences, and their interaction had no statistically
significant effect on participants’ STEBI-B scores. Additionally, responses from the
PCPM questionnaire and focus group interviews indicated that participants generally
perceived both microteaching models as effective in enhancing their science teaching
efficacy. |
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