2016
DOI: 10.21432/t23k8t
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Social Justice or Status Quo? Blended Learning in a Western Canadian Teacher Education Program | Justice sociale ou statu quo ? L’apprentissage mixte dans un programme de formation d’enseignants dans l’Ouest canadien

Abstract: Sustainable pre-service teacher education is needed to encourage academic success for under-represented populations, through both culturally responsive and alternative programming options (Carr-Stewart, Balzer, & Cottrell, 2013). In 2013, the Western Canadian University that served as the basis for this case study, implemented a blended learning pilot course in multicultural education for its existing cohort of pre-service teachers, within their Indigenous Focus Teacher Education Program (IFTEP). The aim o… Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…There were very few discussion forum prompts based on course reading and response, but rather discussions were focused on responses to the student created artifacts. Snow (2016) outlines how critical the online discussion space can be for students in finding their voice, therefore very little instructor-mandated responses were required, but rather a framework for safety through etiquette and communication that encouraged mutual respect and shared learning. Modeled from McAuley and Walton (2011), attempts were made to remove the traditional hierarchy of discussion forums to promote more authentic sharing.…”
Section: The Course Designmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…There were very few discussion forum prompts based on course reading and response, but rather discussions were focused on responses to the student created artifacts. Snow (2016) outlines how critical the online discussion space can be for students in finding their voice, therefore very little instructor-mandated responses were required, but rather a framework for safety through etiquette and communication that encouraged mutual respect and shared learning. Modeled from McAuley and Walton (2011), attempts were made to remove the traditional hierarchy of discussion forums to promote more authentic sharing.…”
Section: The Course Designmentioning
confidence: 99%