英文摘要 |
The purposes of this study were to explore during experiment course, how blind students learned cooperatively with normal students, and how chemistry teachers cooperated with the teacher of blind students to teach both blind and normal students in chemistry courses. Participants included two blind students (both were 8th grade junior high students), one blind-education teacher, two teachers who teach these students chemistry, and one normal student who was the students' peer in the same learning group. Blind-education teacher also was the researcher. The researcher used a video recorder to videotape classroom instruction sessions, and used a tape recorder for recording interview data for chemistry teachers, blind-education teacher, visual impaired students, and normal student on their perceptions of cooperative teaching, cooperative learning, and problems they faced. The teaching materials for the experiment were from chemistry experiment units of Nature Science and Life Technology (3rd volume) which used for the first semester of the 8th grade junior high school students. Research findings of this study include: (1)Blind students desired to learn chemistry, but they could not see the diagram and tables in the textbook; (2)they desperately needed experts to assist them to take note, orally repeat the instructor's teaching content, and help with students' chemistry experimental operation task; and (3)the co-teaching model consisted of chemistry teacher from the regular classroom and the special education teacher specialized in blind education should be re-modified. |