International activities at the IFS
The connection to the international scientific community is of great strategic importance for the IFS. Thus, the IFS is anchored in top national and international research. Furthermore, scientists regularly publish their research results in English-language journals or present them at international conferences. In addition, the institute regularly hosts visiting scholars; on the one hand, staff members spend research stays abroad, and on the other hand, guest lecturers from abroad come to the institute for research stays, project exchanges or guest lectures. Finally, the area of teaching at the institute is also characterized by its international orientation, as there are, for example, teaching concepts for the implementation of intercultural education in teacher training.

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Article in Frontiers in Education published
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This article “Can we foster pre-service teachers’ competences for digital collaboration?” by Annika Ohle-Peters, Ulrich Ludewig and Nele McElvany contributes to the highly relevant question of how to prepare teachers for increasingly digitalized teaching and learning settings in school.
Digital collaboration in schools is becoming increasingly important in educational processes – for teachers as well as for students. Teachers’ competences, including professional knowledge (e.g., technological-pedagogical content knowledge; TPCK), attitudes (e.g., regarding the usefulness of digital collaboration), and their motivational orientations (e.g., intrinsic motivation and self-efficacy beliefs), are essential prerequisites for digital collaboration within the teaching staff and for teaching students how to learn collaboratively using digital media. Teacher education at universities plays a crucial role in the development of teachers’ professional competences, yet little is known about how teachers’ digital collaboration competences can be fostered effectively. Hence, the research aim was to (a) investigate the development of pre-service teachers’ TPCK, attitudes, and motivational orientations toward digital collaboration in general, (b) analyze the development of their intentions to use digital collaboration in the future, and (c) evaluate the effectiveness of interventions focused on digitally collaborative learning. In this multi-cohort quasi-experimental study with pre-post design, 439 students participated either in university courses of the intervention group (IG), who explicitly fostering digital collaboration, or in regular university courses without explicit fostering of digital collaboration, who served as a control group (CG).
Overall, the results indicate a positive development of the TPCK of pre-service teachers and their intentions to use digital collaboration. Differences in development between IG and CG were also found in these two competence facets.




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