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  1. Teaching with the C3 Framework: Surveying teachers׳ beliefs and practices.Emma S. Thacker, John K. Lee & Adam M. Friedman - 2017 - Journal of Social Studies Research 41 (2):89-100.
    The C3 Framework encourages ambitious inquiry-based social studies teaching. While inquiry is regularly recommended as a preferred pedagogy, research has shown that social studies teachers rarely engage students in inquiry. This exploratory study surveyed social studies teachers in one school district in a southeastern state to update our understanding of teachers’ instructional beliefs and practices related to inquiry and the C3 Framework. Survey responses were analyzed using descriptive statistics and open coding. Findings indicate that the majority of teachers use instructional (...)
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  • Teachers' adoption of inquiry-based learning activities : the importance of beliefs about education, the self, and the context.Michiel Voet & Bram De Wever - 2018 - Journal of Teacher Education 70 (5):423-440.
    Even though studies have shown that the impact of professional development on inquiry-based learning tends to remain limited when it fails to consider teachers' beliefs, there is little known about how these beliefs influence teachers' adoption of IBL. In answer to this issue, the present study offers a framework that explains teachers' use of IBL through three constitutive dimensions of beliefs systems, covering the constructs of education, the self, and the context. This framework is empirically investigated through a survey study (...)
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  • Preservice preparation and other potential influences on in-service beliefs and practices: A tale of two secondary social studies teachers.Robert C. Jones & John W. Saye - 2018 - Journal of Social Studies Research 42 (1):81-94.
    Presented here are the cases of two secondary social studies teachers who were participants in a larger research endeavor designed to examine the enduring effects of a preservice teacher preparation program rooted in problem-based historical inquiry (PBHI) on their in-service beliefs and practices. The study was designed to revisit graduates of this teacher preparation program after they completed their induction into the profession. The two teachers selected for closer examination in this piece had relatively similar preservice teacher experiences and taught (...)
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  • Learning to teach history as interpretation: A longitudinal study of beginning teachers.Christopher C. Martell - 2013 - Journal of Social Studies Research 37 (1):17-31.
    Over the past two decades many social studies educators have called for history to be taught as interpretation, which has included arguments for the teaching of history through inquiry. This case study examined four secondary social studies teachers and their development of beliefs and practices related to teaching history as interpretation. The data were collected longitudinally from their student teaching through the completion of their first year in the classroom. Corroborating arguments found in the pre-existing research, this study found that (...)
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