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THE EFFECT OF INSTRUCTION DIFFERENTIATION IN PREVENTIVE CLASSROOM MANAGEMENT STRATEGIES ON EARLY CHILDHOOD AND ELEMENTARY PRESERVICE TEACHERS’ SELECTED BEHAVIORS IN A MUSIC INTEGRATION COURSE By Copyright 2019 Jennifer L. Potter Submitted to the graduate degree program in Music Education and Music Therapy and the Graduate Faculty of the University of Kansas in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Music Education. ________________________________ Dr. Debra Hedden, Chairperson ________________________________ Dr. Martin Bergee ________________________________ Dr. Melissa Grady ________________________________ Dr. Christopher Johnson ________________________________ Dr. Jennifer Ng Date Defended: 15 April 2019 ii The Dissertation Committee for Jennifer L. Potter certifies that this is the approved version of the following dissertation: THE EFFECT OF INSTRUCTION DIFFERENTIATION IN PREVENTIVE CLASSROOM MANAGEMENT STRATEGIES ON EARLY CHILDHOOD AND ELEMENTARY PRESERVICE TEACHERS’ SELECTED BEHAVIORS IN A MUSIC INTEGRATION COURSE ________________________________ Chairperson Dr. Debra Hedden Date approved: April 24, 2019 iii Abstract The purpose of this study was to investigate the effect of instruction differentiation in preventive classroom management strategies on early childhood and elementary preservice teachers’ selected behaviors during assigned classroom teaching of music instruction to peers. Participants were early childhood and elementary preservice teachers (N = 7) enrolled in a music integration course at a Midwestern university. This investigation constituted a two-factor within subjects design. The first independent variable was instruction in preventive classroom management which had three conditions: lecture, individual practice, and demonstration practice; the second independent variable was lesson type which had three levels: song/chant, listening, and movement. The dependent variable was the number of selected behaviors (verbal cues, physical proximity, model correct student behavior) displayed by the participants across three eight-minute microteaching sessions. Primary findings included: (a) no statistically significant main effect for treatment condition; (b) a significant main effect for lesson type; (c) a significant main effect for microteaching session; (d) no significant difference among lecture, individual practice, and demonstration practice conditions; (e) a significant difference between listening and movement lessons; (f) no significant difference between song/chant and movement lessons; (g) a significant difference between microteaching session one and three. Anecdotal data and open-ended responses indicated that participants found their participation in this investigation to be beneficial with respect to gaining knowledge of preventive classroom management and experiencing hands-on practice with these strategies. The participants also noted the immediacy and transferability of preventive classroom management strategies to various settings outside of their teacher preparation programs. iv Results were discussed in terms of (a) limitations of the study; (b) general outcomes; (c) implications and suggestions for future investigations; and (d) considerations for early childhood, elementary, and music education research.
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