Abstract:
The study sought to investigate the effectiveness of the mentoring strategy in
the supervision of secondary teacher education students in the Postgraduate
Diploma in Education (PGDE) programme. The study was qualitative in nature
using a case study approach. Mentoring was the phenomenon studied in depth. A
convenience sample of three students and their three mentors was used for the
study. This sample was done from a total population of eight student teachers
and their eight mentors in the Masvingo region of Zimbabwe. Data was collected
through observation of lessons taught by each of the three students. Students and
their mentors then produced autobiographical accounts of their experiences with
the mentoring process. Data was also collected through document analysis of the
students’ teaching practice fi les, which contained their schemes of work, detailed
lesson plans, pupil records and mentors’ supervision reports.
The study found that all six participants had a clear understanding of what
mentoring entailed. The students and their mentors had collegial relationships that
facilitated the guidance the students needed. The mentors used different strategies
to guide the students, such as joint planning of lessons, conducting demonstration
lessons in areas of student diffi culty and observing students’ teaching in order
to facilitate the students’ acquisition of skills and knowledge in lesson delivery
and interactive classroom management. Students indicated that, through being
mentored, they had developed positively in teaching skills, refl ective teaching and
classroom management.
Description:
Proceedings of the 3rd biannual International Conference on
Distance Education and Teachers’ Training in Africa (DETA) held at
the University of Cape Coast,
Cape Coast, Ghana, August 2009