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What is Team-Teaching

Cases on Kyosei Practice in Music Education
Approach in which multiple teachers collaborate with one adopting a primary or leadership roles while other adopt supporting roles to guide student learning.
Published in Chapter:
Music Composition and Kyosei: Advancing Practice Through Teaching-Learning Partnerships
Michele Ellen Kaschub (University of Southern Maine, USA)
Copyright: © 2019 |Pages: 20
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-5225-8042-3.ch011
Abstract
The spirit of cooperation central to kyosei is a critical component in the creative corners of American music education. This chapter will describe a project that involved the creation of a hybrid space where a music teacher-educator and practitioner worked with pre-service teachers and middle school students to explore teaching and learning music composition. By recasting who is considered an expert, rethinking institutional boundaries, and immersing in project-based learning on multiple levels, teacher education programs and schools can better identify their challenges and explore possible solutions. Though not part of initial program planning, the principles of kyosei were evidenced in the evolution of complex understandings developed prior to and throughout the project, in the inclusive nature of project-based learning by pre-service teachers and music students, and in the professional relationships—and, ultimately, the friendships—that emerged as the teaching-learning community matured.
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More Results
Report of an Interdisciplinary Course in Product Design Education
Approach to classroom instruction involving several teachers over a single group of students. The group of teachers can get together to do any or all of the following as a team: set goals, design the syllabus, prepare lesson plans, teach students, and do evaluations. Ideally members of the team can have the same disciplinary background, as in the case of a large class requiring multiple teachers to handle individual or smaller groups of students, or come from different disciplines, as those cases in which it is necessary to cover interdisciplinary content in the same course.
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