Full metadata
Title
Teacher learning within literacy instruction: reflective & refractive considerations on the community, interpersonal, and individual planes
Description
This qualitative study explores the learning experiences of two first-grade teachers in a progressive public elementary school in the southwestern U.S. Participants inquired into their literacy instruction practices within their reading-workshops. Weekly inquiry group conversations between teachers and researcher informed a perspective of learning as participation. During the semester-long study, two key questions guided design and implementation: 1) What is the nature of teachers' learning experiences related to their literacy instruction practices, contextualized within an inquiry group? 2) How do those learning experiences reflect and/or refract the community, interpersonal, and individual planes of analysis? An ethnographic perspective informed data collection and analysis; data were collected through weekly inquiry-group conversations, bi-weekly classroom observations, and in-depth interviews. A learning framework of community, interpersonal, and individual planes of analysis served as an analytic tool used in conjunction with a modified analytic induction. Teachers' case studies offer unique accounts of their learning, contextualized within their specific classrooms. Findings are discussed through narrative-based vignettes, which illustrate teachers' learning trajectories. On the community plane, apprenticeship relationships were evident in teachers' interactions with students' parents and with one another. Interpersonal interactions between teachers demonstrated patterns of participation wherein each tried to teach the other as they negotiated their professional identities. Analysis of the individual plane revealed that teachers' past experiences and personal identities contributed to ways of participation for both teachers that were highly personal and unique to each. Affective considerations in learning were a significant finding within this study, adding dimensionality to this particular sociocultural theory of learning. The ways teachers felt about themselves, their students, their community, and their work constituted a significant influence on what they said and did, as demonstrated on all three planes of analysis. Implications for practice include the significance of professional development efforts that begin at the site of teachers' questions, and attention to teachers' individual learning trajectories as a means to supporting educators to teach in more confident and connected ways.
Date Created
2011
Contributors
- Steeg, Susanna Mae (Author)
- Mccarty, Teresa L. (Thesis advisor)
- Fischman, Gustavo E. (Committee member)
- Marsh, Josephine P. (Committee member)
- Smith, Karen (Committee member)
- Arizona State University (Publisher)
Topical Subject
- General Education
- Teacher Education
- Language arts
- affect in learning
- holistic literacy instruction
- inquiry
- in-service teachers
- qualitative case study
- teacher learning
- Elementary school teachers--In-service training--Case studies.
- Elementary school teachers
- Inquiry-based learning--Case studies.
- Inquiry-Based Learning
- Learning, Psychology of--Case studies.
- Affect (Psychology)--Case studies.
- Affect (Psychology)
- Literacy--Study and teaching--Case studies.
- literacy
- Reading--Case studies.
- Reading
Resource Type
Extent
xvi, 220 p. : ill. (some col.)
Language
eng
Copyright Statement
In Copyright
Primary Member of
Peer-reviewed
No
Open Access
No
Handle
https://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.9243
Statement of Responsibility
by Susanna M. Steeg
Description Source
Viewed on January 29, 2013
Level of coding
full
Note
thesis
Partial requirement for: Ph. D., Arizona State University, 2011
bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (p. 190-199)
Field of study: Curriculum and instruction (Language and literacy)
System Created
- 2011-08-12 04:45:30
System Modified
- 2021-08-30 01:52:37
- 3 years 2 months ago
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