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Preservice Elementary Teachers' Actual and Designated Identities as Teachers of Science and Teachers of Students

机译:职前基础教师作为科学教师和学生教师的实际身份和指定身份

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摘要

Preservice elementary teachers often have concerns about teaching science that may stem from a lack of confidence as teachers or their own negative experiences as learners of science. These concerns may lead preservice teachers to avoid teaching science or to teach it in a way that focuses on facts and vocabulary rather than engaging students in the doing of science. Research on teacher identity has suggested that being able to envision oneself as a teacher of science is an important part of becoming a teacher of science. Elementary teachers are generalists and as such rather than identifying themselves as teachers of particular content areas, they may identify more generally as teachers of students. This study examines three preservice teachers' identities as teachers of science and teachers of students and how these identities are enacted in their student teaching classrooms. Using a narrated identity framework, I explore stories told by preservice teachers, mentor teachers, student teaching supervisors, and science methods course instructors about who preservice teachers are as teachers of science and teachers of students. Identities are the stories that are told about who someone is or will become in relation to a particular context. Identities that are enacted are performances of the stories that are an identity. Stories were collected through interviews with each storyteller and in an unmoderated focus group with the three preservice teachers. In addition to sorting stories as being about teachers of science or students, the stories were categorized as being about preservice teachers in the present (actual identities) or in the future (designated identities). The preservice teachers were also observed teaching science lessons in their student teaching placements. These enactments of identities were analyzed in order to identify which aspects of the identity stories were reflected in the way preservice teachers taught their science lessons. I also analyzed the stories and enactments in order to determine which storytellers were significant narrators for the preservice teachers' identities. The findings from this study show that significant narrators vary among the preservice teachers and include artifacts such as curriculum materials and instructional models in addition to people who are expected to be significant narrators. Furthermore, differences between preservice teachers' actual and designated identities influence opportunities to learn about what it means to be a teacher of science and students. This took different forms with each preservice teacher. In one case the preservice teacher worked to enact aspects of her designated identity and reflected about how she was not quite able to be the teacher of science she wanted to be as a novice teacher. Another case showed how the gap between actual and designated identities could limit opportunities to learn when the preservice teacher's strong actual identity as a novice led her to consider certain aspects of her designated identity as things which could not even be tried at this point. Finally, in the third case the preservice teacher's strong actual identity limited opportunities to develop a designated identity because she did not see herself as being a different kind of teacher of science in the future than she was right now as a student teacher. These findings suggest that supporting preservice elementary teacher identity development as teachers of science is an important part of preparing them to teach science in ways that engage students in scientific practices. Additionally, it is essential to examine identity stories and enactments in concert with each other in order to gain deeper understandings of how identities are developed and put into practice in classrooms.
机译:职前基础教师通常对教学科学感到担忧,这可能是由于教师缺乏信心或他们作为科学学习者的消极经历造成的。这些担忧可能导致职前教师避免讲授科学或以注重事实和词汇的方式而不是让学生从事科学的方式来教授科学。关于教师身份的研究表明,能够将自己想象成科学老师是成为科学老师的重要组成部分。初级教师是通才,因此,与其说自己是特定内容领域的老师,不如说是学生的老师。这项研究检查了三种职前教师的身份,即科学教师和学生教师,以及在学生的教学课堂中如何体现这些身份。我使用叙述性的身份框架,探索了职前老师,导师老师,学生教学主管和科学方法课程讲师讲的故事,讲授谁作为科学老师和学生老师。身份是关于特定背景下某人的身份或将成为身份的故事。制定的身份是作为身份的故事的表演。通过与每个讲故事者的访谈以及与三名岗前教师的不拘形式的焦点小组的访谈来收集故事。除了将故事分类为关于理科老师或学生的故事以外,这些故事还被分类为关于当前(实际身份)或将来(指定身份)的职前教师。职前教师还在学生的教学实习中接受了科学课的观察。对身份的这些规定进行了分析,以便确定身份故事的哪些方面在职前教师讲授科学课的方式中得到反映。我还分析了故事和成文法,以确定哪些故事讲述者是岗前教师身份的重要叙述者。这项研究的结果表明,重要的叙事者在职前教师中各不相同,除了预期会成为重要叙事者的人之外,还包括课程资料和教学模型等文物。此外,职前教师的实际身份和指定身份之间的差异会影响了解科学老师和学生意味着什么的机会。每个岗前教师采取不同的形式。在一个案例中,职前老师努力制定她指定身份的各个方面,并反思她如何无法成为理科老师,而她想成为新手老师。另一个案例表明,当职前教师作为新手的强大实际身份导致她考虑自己指定身份的某些方面时,甚至无法尝试,实际身份和指定身份之间的差距如何限制学习机会。最后,在第三种情况下,职前教师强有力的实际身份限制了发展指定身份的机会,因为她认为自己将来与现在作为学生教师的情况不同,是她自己不同于科学老师。这些发现表明,支持作为科学教师的职前小学教师的身份发展,是他们准备以使学生参与科学实践的方式进行科学教学的重要组成部分。此外,至关重要的是要相互研究身份故事和成文法则,以加深对如何发展身份并将其付诸实践的深入了解。

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    Canipe Martha Murray;

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