
The Complex Development of Preservice and Inservice Teacher Identities
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Previous scholars have investigated aspects of the complexity of teacher identity and demonstrated the need to look beyond skills and generalized "best practices" to consider social processes and power relationships. However, few books focus on teacher identities at both the micro and macro levels. In this timely book, the authors argue that teacher identity awareness is crucial for both preservice and in-service teachers who desire deeper knowledge about the role of identities in effective instruction. The Complex Development of Preservice and Inservice Teacher Identities breaks new theoretical ground in understanding teacher identities by bringing a process drama lens to bear on development at the macro and micro levels. Process drama uses dramatic structures such as teacher in role, students in role, tableau and others to activate imaginations and explore interpretive possibilities. Through this lens Crumpler and Handsfield show how teacher identities are performed, reproduced, and how they may shift at the micro level-in everyday discourse and classroom practices-across a span of two years. Two years of data are analyzed using micro-ethnographic discourse analysis to demonstrate how teachers tactically position themselves to navigate current political discourses of accountability and standardization in both pre-service and in-service contexts. Understanding how identities are constructed, evolve, and shift moment-by-moment is essential for programs striving to prepare successful teachers and for schools providing meaningful professional development for in-service teachers.
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Persons
Thomas P. Crumpler (Ph.D., Ohio State University, 1996) is Professor of Education at Illinois State University. His work focuses on formative assessment in literacy, identity, and process drama. His work has been funded by the Spencer Foundation and published in several academic books and journals.
Lara J. Hands?eld (Ph.D., University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, 2005) is Professor of Education at Illinois State University. Her work centers on literacy instruction and identity in linguistically diverse classrooms. Her research has been funded by the Spencer Foundation and published in several academic books and journals.
Content
List of Figures - List of Tables - Brian Edmiston: Foreword - Acknowledgments - Introduction - The Complexities of Teacher Identity - Setting the Stage: Scenes of Inquiry in Pre- and Inservice Teacher Development - First Interlude-Dylan - Identity as Becoming in Professional Development: Isabel's Multiple Positioning - Mobile Literacies, Scaling Practices, and Mobile Identities - Performing Multiple Identities in Student Teaching - Second Interlude-Camille - Exploring Teacher Identity Development Through Study Groups - Reimagining Teacher Identity Research-A Dramatic Approach - Index.
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