The study demonstrated the potentials that exist for the use
of instructional strategies to complement the teachers" attempt to create
constructive learning environments in early childhood settings. Instructional
strategies contribute to effective teaching and learning in early childhood
classrooms, which in turn, impacts children’s development in diverse ways. Even
though previous research points to the significance of early childhood
teachers’ practices that take into consideration the nature of children and how
they learn, there is limited research regarding how instructional strategies
impact children’s development in diverse ways. A multi-case-qualitative study
approach was used in this study because there is a need to establish the
differences regarding teachers" practices in Tata School and Kariba School
sited in different socio-economic settings. One research question guided the
study, namely, which instructional strategies do teachers use in a kindergarten
classroom? Data used were semi-structured individual interviews pair-based
interviews and field notes of classroom observations. Both within and across
case interpretative analysis, as was used. The findings of this study revealed
these teachers believed that instructional strategies impacted children’s
development in different ways; they pointed to play-based instruction and
integration as well as specific strategies such as picture-walk and
think-pair-share that they believed to promote effective teaching and learning
in kindergarten classrooms which in turn, enhanced and promoted children’s
multiple intelligences in terms of socio-emotional, physical, cognitive and
language development. The study established that insights of pre-service early
childhood teachers into the appropriate use of both specific and generic
instructional strategies regarding when and how to use each of them within the
teaching and learning context have the potential to unearth children’s
potential by situated the selection of instructional strategies within the
context of the uniqueness that individual children bring to the teaching and learning
context concerning interests, needs and potential.
Author(s) Details:
Mumuni Thompson,
University of Cape Coast, Ghana.
Please see the link here: https://stm.bookpi.org/PLLER-V8/article/view/14273
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