Abstract
All learners benefit when schools foster an environment for teachers to enhance their teaching skills. Pre-service education programs are often where this important process begins. Using a Global Concept Mapping method, pre-service teachers across Canada were interviewed about the personal and professional experiences that contributed to their instructional practices within inclusive classrooms. Participants sorted 93 unique statements into categories. They were asked to rate on a scale of 1 (not at all important) to 6 (very important) how important each experience would be to their instructional practices. Mentoring relationship statements were rated significantly more important than the others. Practicum experiences and those within the course part of the education program were rated as equally important and more important than professional development. Their perceived least important experiences were those related to past jobs/positions and personal experiences with people identified with diverse learning needs. Understanding the specific experiences that influence pre-service teachers’ perspectives of their inclusive instructional practices will help teacher education programs connect to what motivates teachers’ early experiences in becoming inclusive educators.
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Specht, J., Fairbrother, M., Gallagher, T. L., Ismailos, L., Villella, M., & MacCormack, J. (2025). ‘Learning from what my Mentor Teachers were Doing in the Classroom to Include Diverse learners’: Experiences that Contribute to the Use of Inclusive Instruction in Pre-Service Teachers. International Journal of Disability, Development and Education, 72(8), 1456–1469. https://doi.org/10.1080/1034912X.2024.2403384
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