ACADEMIC TRAINING IN SPANISH UNIVERSITIES FOR THE DIDACTIC USE OF CINEMA IN PRE-SCHOOL AND PRIMARY EDUCATION

One of the characteristic features of current society is the relevance of technology and audiovisual media. This fact has generated demands in the educational field to adapt objectives and methodologies to non-textual languages. Among the predominant audiovisual media is the cinema, which has many potentialities as a didactic resource. Therefore, the aim of this study was to find out the training that students of the Teacher’s Degree in Spanish universities receive for the didactic use of cinema through a nationwide research with survey design in which 4659 students, belonging to all the Autonomous Communities and 58 universities, participated. The questionnaire called Perceptions about the potentialities of cinema as a didactic resource in pre-school and primary classrooms (PECID) was designed ad hoc. This questionnaire, which consists of 45 items, has a section that deals with the training received for the educational use of cinema. The Spanish universities offering the Teacher Degree were identified and contacted for the dissemination of the questionnaire. The results obtained showed that 88.4% had not received training. Furthermore, 250 subjects were identified in which film content is taught, mostly in the second and third year and in the area of Didactics and School Organization. It was also found that the most frequent activities carried out are the viewing of films with individual answers to questions and the film forum. This pioneering study in Spain aims to provide information as a basis for further academic training in cinema as a resource of high educational value.

For its part, the Spanish educational laws related to the professional field of the Teacher's Degree, as is the case of the Organic Law 8/2013 for the Improvement of Educational Quality (2013), which repeals part of the previous Organic Law 2 /2006/ on Education (2006, establishes as objectives "to use different artistic representations and expressions and to begin to build visual and audiovisual proposals" or to promote "the knowledge of different artistic languages". Furthermore, the studies by Ramírez, Renés and García-Ruiz, (2014), Ramírez, Renés and Aguaded, (2016), Ramírez, Renés and González, (2018), and Lara, Ruiz and Tarín (2019) have analysed the presence of the media and cinema in the Spanish curricular frameworks of the compulsory education stages. The last three authors have found that cinema is present in the regional curricula of Pre-school and Primary Education, although in an unequal way. In this sense, in Primary Education, the cinema as a resource of educational support is included in all the communities, but only in the Community of Madrid and in Andalusia is it also present at the same time as a critical analysis of the audiovisual, as a form of own production of films and as a form of art.
Based on the above, it is worth asking how the Spanish university is meeting these training requirements in the training of future teachers. Some research has analysed the curricula of some universities and how they are tackling the development of digital competence (Gewerc & Montero, 2015;Ortega, 2015;Cabero, 2017;Muñoz & Cubo, 2019;Fuentes, López & Pozo, 2019) and the media competence (López & Aguaded, 2015;Gozálvez, Masanet, Hernando & Bernal-Bravo, 2019), but not the teaching competence to apply cinema in education, nor from a national scope, identifying a relevant research gap. Therefore, the general objective of this study is to know the training received by students of the Teacher Degree in Spanish universities for the educational use of cinema. The following specific objectives are based on this general objective: 1. To analyse whether students in the Teacher's Degree are receiving training in the educational use of film, considering the national scope, the Autonomous Community, the type of Teacher's Degree and the ownership of the university.
2. To identify the subjects where specific content is taught for the educational use of film, based on the university, the Autonomous Community, the ownership of the university, the type of Teacher's Degree and its characterization in the curriculum.
3. To know the activities that the teachers of the Teacher's Degree conduct using film as a teaching resource and the frequency of application.
4. To detect whether students in the Teacher's Degree consider necessary further specific training to use film as a teaching resource in the classroom.

Method
The research conducted is descriptive and survey-based. The survey design is widely used in the education field, especially when large samples are to be collected from various strata or territories. In this sense, Arnau (1996) indicates that survey designs are aimed at obtaining quantitative information about the characteristics of a given population, making it possible to describe them.

Participants
In the case of a national study, the participating sample was 4659 students from all the Autonomous Communities and 58 universities, 39 public and 19 privates, following a quota sampling (Bisquerra, 2014). Of the mentioned sample, 15.5% (n=720) of the participants were men and 84.5% (n=3939) women and had an average age of 22.3 years (SD=3.9). On the other hand, 51.0% (n=2378) were from the Primary School Teacher's Degree and 49.0% (n=2281) were from the Pre-school Teacher's Degree. Furthermore, 89.8% (n=4183) of the participants were from public universities and 10.2% (n=476) from private universities. If we look at the territorial distribution, below, in figure 1, we present the frequencies and percentages of the participating students according to the Autonomous Community. As far as the universities are concerned, table 1 shows the participating students according to the university they belong to. The total sample is representative of the analysed population with a sampling error of 1.4% and a confidence level of 95.5%.

Instrument
The questionnaire Perceptions about the potentialities of cinema as a didactic resource in pre-school and primary classrooms (PECID) was used for data collection. It was designed ad hoc for the research and consists of 45 items, distributed in two parts. In this sense, the third section of the first part of the questionnaire, with 11 items, focuses on the training received for the use of cinema as a didactic resource (Lorenzo-Lledó, 2020). The results presented are those relating to the items on whether training has been received in the Teacher Degree, in which subject or subjects, how many hours of training and the frequency with which teachers have participated in activities in which cinema is the teaching resource. In addition, an item is included that focuses on the students' perception of the need to receive specific training to use film as a teaching resource in the classroom. These items were subjected to expert judgement, applying the Content Validity Coefficient (Hernández-Nieto, 2002). Thus, values higher than 0.80 were obtained, reflecting good content validity.

Procedure
In the first phase of the study, we proceeded to identify the Spanish universities, both public and private, in the different Autonomous Communities that offered the Teacher's Degree. In the second phase, teachers were contacted by email, informing them of the objectives of the research and requesting their collaboration in disseminating the questionnaire to their students. Finally, in the third phase, data collection was carried out. The students filled in the questionnaire during the academic year 2018/2019 through the Google Forms tool, informing themselves beforehand that it was a totally anonymous and voluntary activity.

Data Analysis
Once the data collection procedure had been planned and implemented, the data were analysed using version 21 of the SPSS statistical package for social sciences. Depending on the research design chosen, the descriptive statistics were analysed using frequencies, percentages and mean.

Results
The results of the study are presented below, grouped according to the quantified variables.

Training Received for the Didactic Use of Cinema
In relation to the results obtained on the existence of specific training in the Teacher's Degree for the use of cinema as a teaching resource, a very high percentage of students of the Teacher's Degree in Spanish universities (88.4%; n=4117) have not received specific training to use cinema in the classroom, stating only 11.6% (n=542) that they did receive training. To analyse the training received according to the Autonomous Community, If one considers training according to the university, the results show that 88.5% (n=4137) of students from public universities have not received training in cinema and 87.0% (n=468) of students from private universities have not either. Table 3 shows the results obtained on the number of subjects in which the students participating in the Teacher's Degree have identified specific content on the didactic use of cinema, depending on the Autonomous Community where it is taught and the university. There are 250 subjects throughout Spain where specific content on the didactic use of cinema is taught and all the Autonomous Communities have at least one university in whose Teacher's Degree some of these subjects exist. It should be noted that Andalusia and Madrid are the communities in which more subjects with such specific content are taught, 50 and 43 subjects respectively, covering 37.2% of the total number of subjects in Spain. Catalonia, Murcia and Valencian Community are also three Communities with a considerable number of subjects with 24, 19 and 18 subjects each. Nonetheless, the majority of the communities have fewer than 10 subjects, with the Balearic Islands being the community where fewer subjects are taught, specifically 2. The two universities with the most subjects are the Rey Juan Carlos University and the University of Málaga, 16 and 13 subjects, which in turn belong to the two communities with the most subjects on the didactic use of cinema. As universities where more than 10 subjects are taught, it is also worth mentioning Murcia and Alcalá, with 13 and 11 respectively. The majority of universities, 27 of the 52 universities, have between 1 and 4 subjects with specific content. In this sense, it is worth mentioning that the University of Girona, the University of Las Palmas, the University of León and the University of Vic have 4 subjects, and with 3 or fewer subjects there are the University of Barcelona, the Autonomous University of Madrid and the University of Compostela, among others.

Autonomous communities
Figures 2 and 3 present the results regarding the percentage of subjects where specific content on the didactic use of cinema is taught according to the type of university and the Teacher's Degree. As can be seen, most of the subjects where content on the didactic use of cinema is taught come from public universities (82.8%; n=207). It is also noted that in the Primary Education Teacher's Degree a higher percentage of subjects of the mentioned profile are taught, 64.4% (n=161) of subjects.
As far as the course is concerned, subjects have been identified in all the courses, although it is in the first two years that there is a higher percentage of subjects, 32.0% in the second year (n=80) and 30.8% (n=77) in the first year, with the fourth year being the one with the fewest subjects (10.0%; n=25). Figure 4 shows the results obtained on the percentage of subjects that include contents on the didactic use of cinema according to its typology. From the results presented, it can be seen that the highest percentage of subjects where specific cinema content is taught are compulsory (47.6%; n=119), although there is also a high percentage of core subjects (40.0%; n=100). In relation to the time placement of subjects with specific film content and their calculation in credits, only 8.0% (n=20) are annual and 46.8% (n=117) are from the second semester. Furthermore, 80.4% of the subjects (n=201) are six credits, 5.6% (n=14) are three credits and 4.4% (n=11) are nine credits. It should be added that the subjects of four, four and a half and twelve credits have respectively the same percentage (1.6%; n=4). The subjects of five, eight and fifteen credits also have respectively the same percentage (1.2%; n=3). Finally, the subjects of eighteen, twenty and twenty-four credits have respectively 0.4% (n=1).
As for the areas of knowledge in which the subjects identified by the students of the Teacher's Degree are framed, where they have received content for the didactic use of cinema, there is a notable diversity, specifically, 29 different areas. Most of the areas, 16 of them, have between 1 and 3 subjects. The two most outstanding areas, which bring together the highest percentage of subjects, are Didactics and School Organization and Language and Literature Teaching with 24.0% (n=60) and 13.6% (n=34) respectively. It is also worth mentioning as areas with a notable number of subjects, more than 18 subjects, the areas of Didactics of Social Sciences (10.0%; n=25), Didactics of Plastic Expression (9.2%; n=23) and Evolutionary and Educational Psychology (7.6%; n=19). With a percentage of subjects lower than 7.0%, the areas of Sociology (6.0%; n=15), Educational Theory ( On the other hand, Table 4 presents the 26 subjects that have identified the most specific content on the educational use of cinema. As can be seen, the subject with the most participating students (9.4%) who have received training in specific content on the didactic use of cinema is Media Education and the educational dimension of ICT at the University of Córdoba. This is a core subject and is taught in the Degree of Teacher in Pre-school Education. In terms of the number of hours they have received training on the use of cinema as a teaching resource, the majority of students (82.3%; n=446) have received between one and twenty hours of training.

Activities with the Cinema as a Didactic Resource
The following table 5 presents the results of the activities that the teachers of the Teacher's Degree implement with the cinema as a didactic resource according to its frequency of application. The results obtained show that teachers in the Teacher Degrees rarely or never conduct activities in which cinema is the didactic resource, with combined response percentages in these two categories above 53.6% and mean below 3. Among the most applied activities, it should be noted that 30.2% of students have moderately frequently watched a film in class and have responded individually to questions, and 22.1% have participated moderately frequently in Cineforum. Less common activities included the editing of a trailer, which was not at all frequent for 70.7%, and digital storytelling, which was not at all frequent for 62.0%.

Need for More Training in the Use of Cinema
In relation to the results on the need expressed by students in the Teacher's Degree for more specific training in the use of cinema as a teaching resource in the classroom, Figure 5 is presented.
As can be seen, 91.5% of students perceive that they need more training to apply cinema in the classroom, highlighting that 75.1% (n=3499) quite and totally agree with this need. On the contrary, only 2.6% (n=119) of the students totally disagree with the need for more training in the use of cinema in the classroom.

Discussion
Bearing in mind the objectives set out in the study, one of the findings obtained was the high percentage (88.4%) of students in the Teacher's Degree at national level who have not received specific training to use film as a teaching resource in Pre-school and Primary Education classrooms. This high number of students without specific training is in line with the results obtained by Masanet & Ferrés (2013) and Cabero & Guerra (2011), which, in the field of Media Education, revealed significant training deficiencies. Lorenzo-Lledó & Roig-Vila (2017) also detected, in the specific case of the University of Alicante, insufficient training in the use of cinema in the classroom. This fact is important for the future application of cinema in the classroom, since, as Lorenzo-Lledó, Lledó and Lorenzo (2020) have observed, students who have received specific training perceive the educational potential of cinema more intensely. On the other hand, it has been observed that teachers of the Teacher's Degree do not usually implement activities where they use cinema as a didactic resource. This means that students, in addition to not receiving specific training in the didactic use of film, do not usually participate in activities with cinema either. In this way, they are also prevented from learning to use cinema through vicarious learning, which is an effective strategy in the training of university students (Criollo, Romero & Fontaines Ruiz, 2017). It should be added that when teachers in the Teacher's Degree choose activities with cinema, they more frequently watch a film with individual answers to questions and the Cineforum. This means that they choose to implement the more traditional activities with cinema (Martín, 2014), to the detriment of more innovative, diverse and procedural activities, which require greater training of both teachers and students, such as, for example, the editing of a trailer, the making of a short film or a storyboard. Nevertheless, the educational shortcomings detected are partly made up for, as shown by Lorenzo-Lledó, Lledó, Pérez-Vázquez and Lorenzo (2020), with a regular habit of watching films a week by students in the Teacher's Degree, which means a way to access the cinema and non-formal training.
If we consider the Autonomous Communities in order to identify which students in Spain have received more training, the study has shown that the communities with the most training are Cantabria and Asturias, so that, with the exception of these communities, more than 68.0% of the students in the different communities have not received any training. In this sense, the community with the highest percentage of untrained students is the Basque Country, which is in turn the community with the lowest frequency of film consumption per week among Teacher Training students in Spain . On the other hand, if we take the type of Teacher's Degree and the type of university of the student body, these variables do not turn out to be a differentiating factor, reflecting in both cases very high percentages of untrained students. Nevertheless, despite the similarities in the results, the percentage of untrained students in the Pre-school Education Teacher's Degree and in public universities is slightly higher.
Regarding the subjects of the Teacher's Degree where specific contents on the didactic use of cinema are taught, in accordance with the low training, in the study 250 subjects were found all over Spain. Masanet and Ferrés (2013) identified 214 subjects with Media Education content in university degrees in the field of education, although with a smaller sample. However, no Autonomous Community was found where no subjects with such content were taught. Thus, Andalusia and Madrid are the Communities with the most subjects, 50 and 43, which could be due to the fact that they are also the Communities with the most universities and the largest student population. However, Catalonia has only one university less than Madrid and the same as Andalusia and has a high percentage of student population and, despite this, has 24 subjects, which shows that Andalusia and Madrid have training indices that are among the highest and that they are two communities whose universities should be taken into account in their training plans as a reference.
Similarly, a greater number of subjects have been found in public universities than in private universities, where no subjects with such content are offered in 6 universities, although the difference in the number of universities of one type or another must be borne in mind. Furthermore, it has been found that students in the Primary Education Teacher Degree take more subjects with specific content on cinema, which is in line with the finding that they have slightly more training. It should be borne in mind that the cinema is a more present audiovisual medium in the contents and objectives of the Primary Education stage (Lara et al., 2019), and therefore it is coherent that it has a greater role in the initial training of primary school teachers. On the other hand, the scarce training that students receive in the Teacher Degree is mainly in the initial courses, since 62.5% of the subjects with such content are taught in the first and second years, a finding also in line with the fact that most of these subjects are core and compulsory.
The few specific contents received by students of the Teacher's Degree from Spanish universities on the didactic use of cinema are included within other subjects with broader contents, with the exception of one specific subject found at the University of Cantabria, called Education of the Gaze: cinema and education, of an optional type. However, more subjects have been found, which, although not specifically dedicated to cinema, are included in Media Education and audiovisual communication. Another important area where students also receive this training is in ICT subjects, with the risk that this entails, as Gutiérrez (2003) and Ferrés (2006) warned, that the technological or instrumental aspect is given greater priority than the critical-reflective one and that the cinematographic aspect is diluted in the generic and often confusing concept of ICT. Nevertheless, the area of knowledge from which a greater percentage of subjects (24.0%) come is Didactics and School Organization, reflected in a greater emphasis on the study of didactic methodologies to be applied with the cinema in the educational context.

Conclusions
Based on the proposed objectives and according to the findings, the following conclusions are indicated: 1. The training received in Spain in the Teacher's Degree for the didactic use of cinema is a minority, with a very high percentage of untrained students.
2. Specific content for the educational use of cinema is taught in 250 subjects throughout Spain. These are mostly core and compulsory, belonging mainly to the first two years, are more present in the Degree of Primary Education Teacher and come mainly from the areas of Didactics and School Organization and Didactics of Language and Literature.
3. It is rare or not at all frequent that teachers of the Teacher's Degree implement activities where they use the cinema as a didactic resource, as is the case with the viewing of a film with individual answers to questions and the Cineforum.
4. In view of the lack of training received, the students of the Teacher's Degree detected a lack in their initial teacher training, stating that they would need more specific training in the use of cinema as a didactic resource in the classroom.
As a limitation of the study, it is worth mentioning the fact that five Spanish private universities did not agree to collaborate in the research. This made it impossible to form a wider and more diverse sample with the participation of students from all Spanish universities.
The study presented is a pioneer in the analysis throughout Spain of the presence of training in the Teacher Degree students for the didactic use of cinema, and therefore opens a line of research for other studies, both national and international, that complement it from different approaches. On a practical level, the training deficiencies detected recommend deepening, with specific plans, the training for the effective application of this resource in favour of the improvement of the teaching-learning processes in Pre-school and Primary Education. This training should be extended to all the Autonomous Communities, although with even greater intensity in those where a greater number of untrained students have been identified. If the cinema is a resource with educational value that does not require a very expensive economic investment and is also a popular medium among future teachers, it can be said that the possibilities of implementing training for the didactic use of the cinema are greater. This training can be implemented through a specific subject or in a transversal way in several areas of knowledge. The essential thing is that the training covers the three educational dimensions detected in the cinema: as a didactic resource of the transmission of content, as a didactic resource of expression and communication, and as a didactic resource of critical analysis (Lorenzo-Lledó, 2020). In this sense, the training should address the educational use of cinema with the training to create learning activities through cinema, without forgetting its aspect as an audiovisual language and a means of artistic expression and as a means to enhance the critical and autonomous development of students. The incorporation of cinema in the initial teacher training must be precise, with links to the curricular design and previously defining the didactic objectives to be pursued. Films, as didactic resources, should be selected for their educational and cultural value and be worked on according to certain guidelines. In this way, the planning of a global pedagogical strategy with the active involvement of teachers and educational institutions is recommended for the optimal application of cinema.