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Examine os métodos selecionados lado a lado; as linhas que diferem ficam destacadas.

Observação em Sala de Aula×Pesquisa Baseada em Design×Lesson Study×
ÁreaMétodos de campoMétodos de campoMétodos de campo
FamíliaProcess / pipelineProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Ano de origem1960s (Flanders Interaction Analysis); refined through 1990s–2000s1992Late 19th century Japan; international dissemination from 1999
Autor originalNed Flanders (systematic interaction analysis); Robert Pianta et al. (CLASS system)Ann L. Brown and Allan Collins (independently, 1992)Japanese elementary school teachers (formalized); introduced to Western research by James Stigler & James Hiebert
TipoQualitative and quantitative observational researchInterventionist qualitative-quantitative mixed methodologyCollaborative practitioner inquiry / professional development research
Fonte seminalFlanders, N. A. (1970). Analyzing Teaching Behavior. Addison-Wesley. link ↗Brown, A. L. (1992). Design experiments: Theoretical and methodological challenges in creating complex interventions in classroom settings. Journal of the Learning Sciences, 2(2), 141–178. DOI ↗Stigler, J. W., & Hiebert, J. (1999). The Teaching Gap: Best Ideas from the World's Teachers for Improving Education in the Classroom. Free Press. ISBN: 978-0684852744
Outros nomesclassroom observation research, structured classroom observation, instructional observation, lesson observationDBR, design research, design experiment, educational design researchJugyou Kenkyuu, LS, collaborative lesson research, teaching study
Relacionados665
ResumoClassroom observation is a field research method in which a trained observer systematically watches, documents, and analyzes teaching and learning events as they occur in a real classroom setting. It can be structured (using a predefined coding instrument such as Flanders Interaction Analysis or CLASS), semi-structured, or open-ended (ethnographic notes), and is used across educational research, teacher professional development, school evaluation, and curriculum studies to generate ecologically valid evidence about instructional practice.Design-based research (DBR) is an iterative, interventionist methodology that simultaneously designs educational interventions and builds theory about how and why those interventions work in authentic, complex settings. Originating in Ann Brown's 1992 classroom experiments and Allan Collins's parallel work, DBR treats the learning environment as both the object of study and the site of theory generation, cycling through design, enactment, analysis, and redesign until both practical improvement and theoretical insight are achieved.Lesson study is a structured, cyclical form of professional development and educational research in which a team of teachers collaboratively plans a single 'research lesson,' observes it live in a classroom, analyzes student learning in detail, revises the lesson, and shares findings with the broader teaching community. Originating in Japanese elementary schools and brought to international attention by Stigler and Hiebert's 1999 comparative study, it has become one of the most widely adopted teacher-led inquiry methods worldwide.
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ScholarGateComparar métodos: Classroom Observation · Design-based Research · Lesson Study. Recuperado em 2026-06-19 de https://scholargate.app/pt/compare