Two of the challenges faced by mathematics teacher educators involve the issue of preservice teachers’ mathematical content knowledge and the impact this has on their PCK, and the perceived gap between the theoretical knowledge received in their teaching course and the practical knowledge gained in the classroom while on professional experience. This paper examines the use of what is essentially a teacher educator tool or strategy, designed to give pre-service teachers a realistic environment in which to address these two challenges. The study uses data collected from pre-service teachers who participated in virtual lessons using Second Life, post-lesson interviews and a teacher educator survey to document the advantages and disadvantages of using such an approach. The results indicate that the use of Second Life has practical implications for teacher educators as an additional tool for modelling and reflecting upon the teaching of mathematics.
History
Publication title
Mathematics Education: Expanding Horizons - Proceedings of the 35th Annual Conference of the Mathematics Education Research Group of Australasia
Editors
J Dindyal, LP Cheng and SW Ng
Pagination
521-528
ISBN
978-981-07-2527-3
Department/School
Faculty of Education
Publisher
MERGA Inc.
Place of publication
Singapore
Event title
35th Annual Conference of the Mathematics Education Research Group of Australasia