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This book focuses on the study-abroad experiences of pre-service
and in-service language teachers and language teacher educators.
The diverse contributions to this volume provide readers with a
deep understanding of what this mobility means for individuals and
the language teaching and learning communities they encounter and
return to post-sojourn. Considering the broad variability of
study-abroad programs and arrangements, as well as the
multidimensional, complex nature of study-abroad social,
geographical and digital environments, the chapters discuss the
teachers' psychological experiences in cognitive, affective and
social terms. Readers will discover the effect of mobility on
identity, beliefs, practices, self-efficacy, agency,
self-confidence, independence and personal growth, as well as how
transitions across borders can result in feelings of self-doubt,
anxiety and insecurity. This is essential reading for language
teacher educators, mentors and supervisors, managers of
study-abroad programs and researchers working in the fields of
study abroad, international education and language teacher
education.
Reflections on Language Teacher Identity Research is the first book
to present understandings of language teacher identity (LTI) from a
broad range of research fields. Drawing on their personal research
experience, 41 contributors locate LTI within their area of
expertise by considering their conceptual understanding of LTI and
the methodological approaches used to investigate it. The chapters
are narrative in nature and take the form of guided reflections
within a common chapter structure, with authors embedding their
discussions within biographical accounts of their professional
lives and research work. Authors weave discussions of LTI into
their own research biographies, employing a personal reflective
style. This book also looks to future directions in LTI research,
with suggestions for research topics and methodological approaches.
This is an ideal resource for students and researchers interested
in language teacher identity as well as language teaching and
research more generally.
Reflections on Language Teacher Identity Research is the first book
to present understandings of language teacher identity (LTI) from a
broad range of research fields. Drawing on their personal research
experience, 41 contributors locate LTI within their area of
expertise by considering their conceptual understanding of LTI and
the methodological approaches used to investigate it. The chapters
are narrative in nature and take the form of guided reflections
within a common chapter structure, with authors embedding their
discussions within biographical accounts of their professional
lives and research work. Authors weave discussions of LTI into
their own research biographies, employing a personal reflective
style. This book also looks to future directions in LTI research,
with suggestions for research topics and methodological approaches.
This is an ideal resource for students and researchers interested
in language teacher identity as well as language teaching and
research more generally.
Communicating Identities is a book for language teachers who wish
to focus on the topic of identity in the context of their classroom
teaching. The work provides an accessible introduction to research
and theory on language learner and language teacher identity. It
provides a set of interactive, practical activities for use in
language classrooms in which students explore and communicate about
aspects of their identities. The communicative activities concern
the various facets of the students' own identities and are
practical resources that teachers can draw on to structure and
guide their students' exploration of their identities. All the
activities include a follow-on teacher reflection in which teachers
explore aspects of their own identity in relation to the learner
identities explored in the activities. The book also introduces
teachers to practical steps in doing exploratory action research so
that they can investigate identity systematically in their own
classrooms.
Student and novice researchers may have a general idea for a topic
they would like to research, but have a difficult time settling on
a more specific topic and its associated research questions.
Addressing this problem, this book features contributions from over
thirty diverse and experienced research supervisors, mentors, and
principal investigators in the field of language teacher education.
The chapters are autobiographic in nature, with each contributing
author reflecting on relevant, current and innovative research
topics through the lens of their own professional life and research
work. Offering explicit research topics and strategies for each
area of expertise, this book will serve as a useful reference for
the seasoned qualitative or narrative researcher, and a helpful
guide for new researchers and teacher researchers narrowing down
their own research topics.
Communicating Identities is a book for language teachers who wish
to focus on the topic of identity in the context of their classroom
teaching. The work provides an accessible introduction to research
and theory on language learner and language teacher identity. It
provides a set of interactive, practical activities for use in
language classrooms in which students explore and communicate about
aspects of their identities. The communicative activities concern
the various facets of the students' own identities and are
practical resources that teachers can draw on to structure and
guide their students' exploration of their identities. All the
activities include a follow-on teacher reflection in which teachers
explore aspects of their own identity in relation to the learner
identities explored in the activities. The book also introduces
teachers to practical steps in doing exploratory action research so
that they can investigate identity systematically in their own
classrooms.
This book focuses on the study-abroad experiences of pre-service
and in-service language teachers and language teacher educators.
The diverse contributions to this volume provide readers with a
deep understanding of what this mobility means for individuals and
the language teaching and learning communities they encounter and
return to post-sojourn. Considering the broad variability of
study-abroad programs and arrangements, as well as the
multidimensional, complex nature of study-abroad social,
geographical and digital environments, the chapters discuss the
teachers' psychological experiences in cognitive, affective and
social terms. Readers will discover the effect of mobility on
identity, beliefs, practices, self-efficacy, agency,
self-confidence, independence and personal growth, as well as how
transitions across borders can result in feelings of self-doubt,
anxiety and insecurity. This is essential reading for language
teacher educators, mentors and supervisors, managers of
study-abroad programs and researchers working in the fields of
study abroad, international education and language teacher
education.
Student and novice researchers may have a general idea for a topic
they would like to research, but have a difficult time settling on
a more specific topic and its associated research questions.
Addressing this problem, this book features contributions from over
thirty diverse and experienced research supervisors, mentors, and
principal investigators in the field of language teacher education.
The chapters are autobiographic in nature, with each contributing
author reflecting on relevant, current and innovative research
topics through the lens of their own professional life and research
work. Offering explicit research topics and strategies for each
area of expertise, this book will serve as a useful reference for
the seasoned qualitative or narrative researcher, and a helpful
guide for new researchers and teacher researchers narrowing down
their own research topics.
The author examines who language teacher educators are in the field
of language teaching and learning. This includes a description of
the different types of language teacher educators working in a
range of professional and institutional contexts, an analysis of
the reflections of a group of experienced English teacher educators
working in Colombia and enrolled in a doctoral program to continue
their professional development, and an exposition of the work that
language teacher educators do, particularly in the domains of
pedagogy, research, and service and leadership (institutional and
community). All of this is done with the aim of understanding the
identities that language teacher educators negotiate and are
ascribed in their working contexts. The author emphasizes the need
for research to pay attention to the lives and work of language
teacher educators, and offers forty research questions as an
indication of possible future research directions.
This book brings together contributions from various researchers,
providing an overview of narrative research approaches and
demonstrating how these work in practice. A broad range of
approaches are covered, from well-established and well-known
thematic analysis (particularly of 'big stories'), to the more
recent sociolinguistic discourse analysis of 'small stories', and
the innovative analysis and presentation of visual and performance
data such as drawings and drama. This overview includes not just an
illustration of narrative research, but the methodological
processes which underpin it, relating these to relevant narrative
theory. The book, therefore, is both a how-to-do narrative research
text and a presentation of narrative studies, providing case study
examples and ideas for further research.
This book brings together contributions from various researchers,
providing an overview of narrative research approaches and
demonstrating how these work in practice. A broad range of
approaches are covered, from well-established and well-known
thematic analysis (particularly of 'big stories'), to the more
recent sociolinguistic discourse analysis of 'small stories', and
the innovative analysis and presentation of visual and performance
data such as drawings and drama. This overview includes not just an
illustration of narrative research, but the methodological
processes which underpin it, relating these to relevant narrative
theory. The book, therefore, is both a how-to-do narrative research
text and a presentation of narrative studies, providing case study
examples and ideas for further research.
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