Professional Learning and Identities in Teaching: International Narratives of Successful Teachers

Author:   A. Cendel Karaman ,  Silvia Edling
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
ISBN:  

9780367747138


Pages:   208
Publication Date:   09 January 2023
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Professional Learning and Identities in Teaching: International Narratives of Successful Teachers


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Overview

"This book explores the reflective potentialities offered by analyses of teachers’ professional learning narratives. The book has a specific focus on narratives on professional learning and professional identities emerging from different contexts and gives a deeper understanding of successful teachers’ narratives globally. Diverging from universally standardized constructions of idealized teacher identity and professional learning, the book provides analyses of a diversified set of cases with detailed descriptions of each teacher’s idiographic and professional context to gain a deeper understanding of situated professional identities. With contributions from a range of international backgrounds, it shows teachers of various age groups, subject areas and curricula contribute their narratives to help readers reflect on different trajectories toward becoming a teacher. These narratives provide insight into and a deeper understanding of the conditions and complex processes that being a ""successful"" teacher involves within these case studies, providing a useful contribution to the field of teacher education. Professional Learning and Identities in Teaching: International Narratives of Successful Teachers will be of great interest to researchers, academics, and post-graduate students of teacher education and international and comparative education."

Full Product Details

Author:   A. Cendel Karaman ,  Silvia Edling
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
Imprint:   Routledge
Weight:   0.340kg
ISBN:  

9780367747138


ISBN 10:   0367747138
Pages:   208
Publication Date:   09 January 2023
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Tertiary & Higher Education
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

Introduction A. CENDEL KARAMAN AND SILVIA EDLING 1. Remaining a student of teaching forever: Critical reflexive insights from a lifetime of multiple teacher identities in the Republic of Ireland GERALDINE MOONEY SIMMIE 2. From success/failure binaries to teaching for justice: Conceptualizing education as access, responsibility, dignity, and transparency WALTER S. GERSHON 3. Teacher narratives as counter-narratives of successful teaching MARIA ALFREDO MOREIRA, ROSA MARIA MORAES ANUNCIATO AND MARIA APARECIDA P. VIANA 4. “If I can do it at this school, you can put me anywhere”: Case studies from Australian graduate teachers in diverse and challenging schools LYNETTE LONGARETTI AND DIANNE TOE 5. Professional development of EFL teachers through reflective practice in a supportive community of practice CHITOSE ASAOKA 6. Looking back with pride—looking forward in hope: The narratives of a transformative teacher FATMA GÜMÜŞOK 7. Understanding a teacher’s professional identity through pedagogical rhythm SÖREN HÖGBERG 8. Revisiting selves through a “success” perspective: An autoethnographic quest of a language teacher across intercultural spaces TUGAY ELMAS 9. Path toward the construction of a professional identity: A narrative inquiry into a language teacher’s experiences PINAR YENİ-PALABIYIK 10. “Successful teaching”: Neoliberal influences and emerging counter-narratives EMRULLAH YASIN ÇİFTÇİ AND A. CENDEL KARAMAN Conclusion: Context, interconnectedness, balance, and risk in teachers’ narratives SILVIA EDLING AND A. CENDEL KARAMAN

Reviews

The publication of this book is a relief. Scholarly as well as ethically. An international group of authors stands up against the worldwide dominance of standardized, de-contextualised comparative approaches in educational policies and research agendas in which their meaning is reduced to a narrow idea of effectiveness. The authors in this book don't deny the importance of effectiveness in education. Yet, they rightfully stress that this concern needs be addressed -conceptually as well as empirically- in ways that acknowledge the inevitable contextualised nature of teaching, as well as the crucial issue of purpose in education (and the ethical, normative choices it implies). Replacing effective teaching by the broader and more appropriate concept of successful teaching, the different contributions in the book seek to build a stronger research-based understanding of teacher professionalism and identity, as well as their development in the particularities of a time-space context. Narrative approaches once more demonstrate their theoretical and methodological power for this scholarly endeavor. Geert Kelchtermans, Professor of Education, University of Leuven, Belgium (KULeuven); Chair of the Centre for Innovation and the Development of Teacher and School. This book, Professional Learning and Identities in Teaching: International Narratives of Successful Teachers, is a volume to savor due to the vast international insights it offers. Editors Cendel Karaman and Silvia Edling are to be commended for inviting a broad range of international scholars to share narratives of teacher success in their home countries. Stories of experience are arguably the only way to show what teachers know and do. Such narratives unavoidably include contextual factors that bound teachers' knowing, doing and being. They offer windows into teachers' professional learning trajectories and identities-in-the-making. Such matters are never conclusive; rather, they repeatedly play out as time passes and new interactions unfurl. The teacher narratives in this volume are vivid and particularistic. Equally revealing is the extent to which neo-liberal agendas are grippingly present in international systems of education. Personal experience methods (i.e., narrative inquiry, autoethnography) are the only way to unleash teachers' voices in socially engineered educational milieus rife with propositional knowledge claims and instrumentalist thinking. Reading this book is a profound experience. Like Cendel Karaman and Silvia Edling, I recommend that readers think with the many stories that follow. I also invite readers to imagine contextual shifts that could more fully support successful teachers' practices. The editors and authors provide plentiful clues concerning how things could be otherwise. Because teachers are the only ones who meet students in flesh-and-blood moments, the future is in their hands regardless of the views of those external to classrooms and schools. Cheryl J. Craig, PhD, Professor, Houston Endowment Endowed Chair of Urban Education and American Educational Research Fellow, Texas A&M University, USA This book provides the reader with a clear and rich account of how professional learning and identities are central to teaching and teacher education. Drawing upon case studies from various contexts, the book demonstrates vividly the importance of looking at the complexity of teaching from the inside. It should be read by teachers, teacher educators, policy makers, researchers and all those interested in learning more about the process of becoming a teacher. Maria Assuncao Flores, Professor, Institute of Education, University of Minho, Portugal; Editor, European Journal of Teacher Education The Professional Learning and Identities in Teaching: International Narratives of Successful Teachers book provides a rich collection of narratives, from an international group of authors, of teachers' professional stories that focus on their professional identity and professional learning. This book is highly recommended for educators, and those involved in international and comparative education, who seek a better understanding of professional learning and the identities of successful teachers . The book will provide an interesting and valuable contribution to the literature read by teachers and will be of particular interest to researchers and academics, and students studying on initial teacher education programmes. Nigel Quirke-Bolt, cited in Educational Review, DOI: 10.1080/00131911.2021.1994779


Author Information

A. Cendel Karaman is Professor in the Faculty of Education at Middle East Technical University, Turkey. His research focuses on interculturality, teacher education, curriculum, professional development, identity, language education, and international mobility in education. Silvia Edling is a Professor and excellent teacher at the Academy of Education and Business Studies at University of Gävle, Sweden, and specializes in questions concerning democracy, teacher professionalism, historical consciousness ethics, justice, and rights in education and higher education.

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