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Abstract—This study explores student teachers' resilience in teaching practice in the COVID-19 era in Masvingo District, Zimbabwe. More specifically, the study was intended to gain insights into the significant teaching practice COVID-19-induced  teaching  practice  stressors.  This  research  study  contributes  new  knowledge  to  the  ongoing  discourses about student teachers' resilience in teaching practice in the COVID-19 era. To explore student teachers' resilience on teaching practice in COVID-19 era, the study employed a qualitative social constructivist approach through a phenomenological research design. Data were generated through focus group discussions and in-depth semi-structured interviews. One teachers' college was conveniently sampled, and twenty-one student teachers and six  student  teachers'  mentors  were  purposively  sampled  from  three  primary  schools  in  Masvingo  District,  Zimbabwe.  Data  were  analysed  using  Interpretive  Phenomenological  Analysis.  The  thematic  findings  revealed  that student teachers teaching practice in the COVID-19 era are subjected to teaching practice stressors induced by the  COVID-19  pandemic,  such  as  fear  of  contracting  the  COVID-19  virus,  illness,  isolation,  stigmatisation  and  death,  anxiety,  uncertainty,  hopelessness,  economic  hardships,  prolonged  teaching  practice  period,  school  closures, transference of face-to-face teaching to online learning. Finally, thematic results revealed that the capacity for  resilience  can  be  developed  during  initial  teacher  preparation,  so  the  study  recommends  that  the  teacher  education curriculum include a module on resilience

Keywords: COVID-19, Resilience, Student teacher, Student teacher's mentor, Teaching practice, Teacher resilience, e-learning https://doi.org/10.38140/ijsie.v1i1.1318