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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Teachers’ Implicit Meaning Systems and Their Implications for Pedagogical Thinking and Practice: A Case Study from Finland

Elina KuusistoKirsi TirriEija HanhimäkiInkeri Rissanen

subject

Teaching methodmedia_common.quotation_subject050109 social psychologyAcademic achievementEducationcase studyPedagogyLearning theoryNatural (music)Personalityta5160501 psychology and cognitive sciencesimplicit meaningsFinlandmedia_commonmerkitysjärjestelmät4. Education05 social sciencesPerspective (graphical)050301 educationopettajatstimulated recall interviewmerkitykset (tieto)implisiittiset teoriatclassroom interactionPsychology0503 educationpedagoginen ajatteluQualitative researchMeaning (linguistics)

description

ABSTRACTThis qualitative case study examines teachers’ implicit meaning systems built around their core beliefs on the malleability of human qualities. Previous research has demonstrated the influence of students’ implicit theories on motivation and achievement and has presented successful interventions for students. However, research on teachers’ implicit theories and, in particular, their actualization in natural environments is lacking. The data for this study include observations and stimulated recall interviews with two Finnish teachers whose opposing implicit theories were first indicated in 2000 by Carol Dweck . The results depict how these teachers’ implicit meaning systems influence their ways of interpreting students’ behavior, learning, and achievements, which in turn guide teachers’ pedagogical thinking as well as their practices for motivating the students. However, these Finnish teachers’ implicit theories also appear to be intertwined with culture-bound assumptions, and the classroom implem...

https://doi.org/10.1080/00313831.2016.1258667