Professional Knowledge or Motivation? Investigating the Role of Teachers’ Expertise on the Quality of Technology-Enhanced Lesson Plans [Dataset] Dataset for: Professional Knowledge or Motivation? Investigating the Role of Teachers’ Expertise on the Quality of Technology-Enhanced Lesson Plans

DOI

In an expertise study with 94 mathematics teachers varying in their relative teacher expertise (i.e., student teachers, trainee teachers, in-service teachers), we examined effects of teachers' professional knowledge and motivational beliefs on their ability to integrate technology within a lesson plan scenario. Therefore, we assessed teachers' professional knowledge (i.e., content knowledge, pedagogical content knowledge, technological knowledge), and their motivational beliefs (i.e., self-efficacy, utility-value). Furthermore, teachers were asked to develop a lesson plan for introducing the Pythagorean theorem to secondary students. Lesson plans by advanced teachers (i.e., trainee teachers, in-service teachers) comprised higher levels of instructional quality and technology exploitation than the ones of novice teachers (i.e., pre-service teachers). The effect of expertise was mediated by teachers' perceived utility-value of educational technology, but not by their professional knowledge. These findings suggest that teachers’ motivational beliefs play a crucial role for effectively applying technology in mathematics instruction.

Dataset for: Backfisch, I., Lachner, A., Hische, C., Loose, F., & Scheiter, K. (2020). Professional knowledge or motivation? Investigating the role of teachers’ expertise on the quality of technology-enhanced lesson plans. Learning and Instruction, 66, 101300. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.learninstruc.2019.101300.

Identifier
DOI https://doi.org/10.23668/psycharchives.2686
Metadata Access https://api.datacite.org/dois/10.23668/psycharchives.2686
Provenance
Creator Backfisch, Iris; Lachner, Andreas; Hische, Christoff; Loose, Frank; Scheiter, Katharina
Publisher PsychArchives
Contributor Leibniz Institut Für Psychologie (ZPID); Leibniz-Institut Für Wissensmedien; University Of Tübingen
Publication Year 2020
Rights CC-BY-SA 4.0; openAccess; Creative Commons Attribution Share Alike 4.0 International
OpenAccess true
Representation
Language English
Resource Type Dataset
Discipline Social Sciences