Teacher agency for social justice in telecollaboration: locating agentive positioning in virtual language interaction

被引:2
作者
uzum, Baburhan [1 ]
Yazan, Bedrettin [2 ]
Mary, Latisha [3 ]
Akayoglu, Sedat [4 ]
机构
[1] Sam Houston State Univ, Sch Teaching & Learning, Huntsville, TX 77340 USA
[2] Univ Texas San Antonio, Coll Educ & Human Dev, San Antonio, TX USA
[3] Univ Strasbourg, Sch Educ, Strasbourg, France
[4] Abant Izzet Baysal Univ, Fac Educ, Bolu, Turkey
关键词
Telecollaboration; virtual intercultural exchange; teacher agency; social justice; online teacher education; EDUCATION; ENGLISH; IDENTITY;
D O I
10.1080/09571736.2022.2080857
中图分类号
G40 [教育学];
学科分类号
040101 ; 120403 ;
摘要
In this study, we draw data from a tripartite telecollaborative project that involved 112 teacher candidates (TCs) from university-based teacher education programmes in France, Turkey, and the USA. Theoretically, we rely on Pantie's (2015. A model for study of teacher agency for social justice. Teachers and Teaching 21, no. 6: 759-778) model of teacher agency for social justice and use discourse analytic methods (Gee. 2018. Introducing Discourse Analysis; from Grammar to Society. Routledge) to examine how TCs negotiated their agency for social justice in small group discussions around the topics of social justice (e.g. conditions of refugees and immigrants, gender inequities, and LGBTQ+ rights) in their educational contexts. We found that when TCs used agentive positionings in their discussions, their discourse involved first person pronouns coupled with will + infinitive structure (e.g. I will teach ...) followed by specific plans of action, as opposed to when agentive positioning was lacking with the use of generic pronouns and hypothetical structures (e.g. teachers/everyone would/could ...). We also found that TCs used the discursive space of telecollaboration to negotiate their agencies and had variable success as they navigated tensions in their beliefs and positioned themselves as future social justice teachers in relation to the discussion topics. Their positionings demonstrated their level of engagement and their individual/collective efficacy. Our findings suggest that future research should continue to investigate the micro-level discourse involved in telecollaborative spaces.
引用
收藏
页码:766 / 782
页数:17
相关论文
共 50 条
[1]   A Transdisciplinary Framework for SLA in a Multilingual World [J].
Atkinson, Dwight ;
Byrnes, Heidi ;
Doran, Meredith ;
Duff, Patricia ;
Ellis, Nick C. ;
Hall, Joan Kelly ;
Johnson, Karen E. ;
Lantolf, James P. ;
Larsen-Freeman, Diane ;
Negueruela, Eduardo ;
Norton, Bonny ;
Ortega, Lourdes ;
Schumann, John ;
Swain, Merrill ;
Tarone, Elaine .
MODERN LANGUAGE JOURNAL, 2016, 100 :19-47
[2]   Emotions as agency: Feeling rules, emotion labor, and English language teachers' decision-making [J].
Benesch, Sarah .
SYSTEM, 2018, 79 :60-69
[3]   The role of beliefs in teacher agency [J].
Biesta, Gert ;
Priestley, Mark ;
Robinson, Sarah .
TEACHERS AND TEACHING, 2015, 21 (06) :624-640
[4]  
Britzman D., 1991, Practice makes practice
[5]  
Canagarajah Suresh., 2013, TRANSLINGUAL PRACTIC
[6]   Doctoral students' agency as second language writing teachers: The quest for expertise [J].
Christiansen, M. Sidury ;
Du, Qian ;
Fang, Ming ;
Hirvela, Alan .
SYSTEM, 2018, 79 :19-27
[7]   The role of telecollaboration in language and intercultural learning: A synthesis of studies published between 2010 and 2015 [J].
Ciftci, Emrullah Yasin ;
Savas, Perihan .
RECALL, 2018, 30 (03) :278-298
[8]  
Coney L., 2016, SOCIAL JUSTICE ENGLI, P11
[9]   Redrawing the Boundaries on Theory, Research, and Practice Concerning Language Teachers' Philosophies and Language Teacher Cognition: Toward a Critical Perspective [J].
Crookes, Graham V. .
MODERN LANGUAGE JOURNAL, 2015, 99 (03) :485-499
[10]   Pedagogies of choice: challenging coercive relations of power in classrooms and communities FOREWORD [J].
Cummins, Jim .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF BILINGUAL EDUCATION AND BILINGUALISM, 2009, 12 (03) :261-271