Publication | Closed Access
Authoring oneself and being authored as a competent teacher
24
Citations
27
References
2012
Year
Teacher EducationCultureSociocultural PerspectiveParticipation AgencyTeachingStudent TeachingPedagogyEducational PsychologyEducationTeacher EducatorTeacher DevelopmentProfessional DevelopmentTeacher PreparationCompetent TeacherClassroom PracticeAvailable MeaningsElementary Education
What kind of self is being made available and denied to student teachers as they participate in life in their teaching practice schools? In addressing this question empirically, the article seeks to show the forms of meaning being made and experienced by student teachers and the identities that are authored, authorised and constrained. A sociocultural perspective on professional learning, with its emphasis on participation agency and identity, illuminates aspects of the process of becoming a teacher and highlights the tension that is there for students within available meanings. Having to opt to be a teacher at the expense of a learner identity constrains what is available to be appropriated in professional settings with potential consequences for how beginner teachers frame themselves, their learners and their colleagues.
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