Teacher Identity Discourses
Title | Teacher Identity Discourses PDF eBook |
Author | Janet Alsup |
Publisher | Routledge |
Total Pages | 419 |
Release | 2006-08-15 |
Genre | Education |
ISBN | 1135600120 |
In this book, Janet Alsup reports and theorizes a multi-layered study of teacher identity development. The study, which followed six pre-service English education students, was designed to investigate her hypothesis that forming (or failing to form) a professional identity is central in the process of becoming an effective teacher. This work addresses the intersection of various types of discourse within the process of professional identity development, emphasizes that the intersection of the personal and professional in teacher identity formation is more complex than is acknowledged in typical methods classes, and accents the need for teacher educators to take steps to facilitate such integration. Specific suggestions for methods courses are presented that teacher educators can use as is or adapt to their own contexts. Teacher Identity Discourses: Negotiating Personal and Professional Spaces speaks eloquently to faculty, researchers, and graduate students across the field of teacher education.
Millennial Teacher Identity Discourses
Title | Millennial Teacher Identity Discourses PDF eBook |
Author | Janet Alsup |
Publisher | Routledge |
Total Pages | 152 |
Release | 2019-02-04 |
Genre | Education |
ISBN | 135103653X |
Over ten years after the original edition of Teacher Identity Discourses, Janet Alsup revisits her work with a new research study examining the characteristics of the millennial teachers now beginning to populate K-12 classrooms. Building off the first edition, this text is based on a qualitative, interview-based research study, and provides a contemporary look at how millennial teachers experience professional identity growth through language use. This innovative research investigates how formation of a professional identity is central in the process of becoming an effective teacher. Updated with new analyses of teacher identity discourses, the second edition covers themes that still resonate today and provides practical suggestions and sample assignments for teacher educators to use or adapt in methods courses.
Teacher Identity Discourses
Title | Teacher Identity Discourses PDF eBook |
Author | Janet Alsup |
Publisher | Routledge |
Total Pages | 251 |
Release | 2006-08-15 |
Genre | Education |
ISBN | 1135600139 |
Addresses the various types of discourse within the process of professional identity development. This work emphasizes that the intersection of the personal and professional in teacher identity formation is more complex, and accents the need for teacher educators to take steps to facilitate such integration.
Language Teacher Identities
Title | Language Teacher Identities PDF eBook |
Author | Matthew Clarke |
Publisher | Multilingual Matters |
Total Pages | 229 |
Release | 2008 |
Genre | Language Arts & Disciplines |
ISBN | 1847690815 |
This book explores the development of the first cohort of students to complete a new Bachelor of Education in English language teaching in the United Arab Emirates, theorizing the students' learning to teach in terms of the discursive construction of a teaching identity within an evolving community of practice.
Research on Teacher Identity
Title | Research on Teacher Identity PDF eBook |
Author | Paul A. Schutz |
Publisher | Springer |
Total Pages | 251 |
Release | 2018-07-11 |
Genre | Education |
ISBN | 3319938363 |
Understanding teachers’ professional identities and their development is key to unpacking teachers’ professional lives, the quality of their instruction, their motivation and commitment to teach, and their career decision-making. This book features a number of scholars from around the world who represent a variety of disciplines, scientific paradigms, and inquiry methods in researching teacher identity. By bringing these chapters together, this volume initiates active scholarly conversations and extends the boundaries of teacher identity research and practice. This collection of chapters provides significant insight into teacher identity and will be essential reading for pre-service and in-service teachers, teacher educators, school administrators, professional developers, and policy makers at various levels.
Teacher Identity and the Struggle for Recognition
Title | Teacher Identity and the Struggle for Recognition PDF eBook |
Author | Patrick M. Jenlink |
Publisher | R&L Education |
Total Pages | 298 |
Release | 2014-04-09 |
Genre | Education |
ISBN | 1607095769 |
Teacher identity is shaped by recognition or its absence, often by misrecognition of others. Recognition as a teacher, or the strong and complex identification with one’s professional culture and community, is necessary for a positive sense of self. Increasingly, teachers are entering educational settings where difference connotes not equal, better/worse, or having more/less power over resources. Differences between discourses of identity are braided at many points with a discourse of racism, both interpersonal and structural. Teacher Identity and the Struggle for Recognition examines the nature of identity and recognition as social, cultural, and political constructs. In particular, the contributing authors to the book present discussions of the professional work necessary in teacher preparation programs concerned with preparing teachers for the complexities of teaching in schools that mirror an increasingly diverse society. Importantly, the authors illuminate many of the often problematic structures of schooling and the cultural politics that work to define one’s identity – drawing into specific relief the nature of the struggle for recognition that all face who choose to entering teaching as a profession.
Criticality, Teacher Identity, and (In)equity in English Language Teaching
Title | Criticality, Teacher Identity, and (In)equity in English Language Teaching PDF eBook |
Author | Bedrettin Yazan |
Publisher | Springer |
Total Pages | 302 |
Release | 2018-03-26 |
Genre | Education |
ISBN | 3319729209 |
This edited volume, envisioned through a postmodern and poststructural lens, represents an effort to destabilize the normalized “assumption” in the discursive field of English language teaching (ELT) (Pennycook, 2007), critically-oriented and otherwise, that identity, experience, privilege-marginalization, (in)equity, and interaction, can and should be apprehended and attended to via categories embedded within binaries (e.g., NS/NNS; NEST/NNEST). The volume provides space for authors and readers alike to explore fluidly critical-practical approaches to identity, experience, (in)equity, and interaction envisioned through and beyond binaries, and to examine the implications such approaches hold for attending to the contextual complexity of identity and interaction, in and beyond the classroom. The volume additionally serves to prompt criticality in ELT towards reflexivity, conceptual clarity and congruence, and dialogue.