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This book provides insights for both native language teachers and
local language teachers alike who conduct team-taught lessons by
revisiting the topic of foreign assistant language teachers (ALTs),
the Japan Exchange and Teaching (JET) program, and team teaching.
This book is innovative in that (a) it is the first to elucidate
ALTs’ experiences comprehensively, across both historical time
(i.e., prior to, during, and after the JET program) and social
space (i.e., inside and outside the school), thereby revealing
their multiple identities that they come to construct and
reconstruct over time, and (b) it explores the meanings and
perspectives of particular phenomena that ALTs experience within
their specific social settings from their own individual points of
view. This inquiry does this by using personal narrative accounts
gathered from multiple participants. Through these narrative
accounts, Hiratsuka formulates a conceptualization of ALT identity,
an effort that has hitherto been neglected. As a consequence, this
book offers several practical and empirical applications of the
conceptualization to future endeavors involving native language
teachers and those who engage with them, including the key
stakeholders of local language teachers, their local boards of
education, the governments, and language learners across the globe.
This book provides insights into the professional and personal
lives of local language teachers and foreign language teachers who
conduct team-taught lessons together. It does this by using the
Japanese context as an illustrative example. It re-explores in this
context the professional experiences and personal positionings of
Japanese teachers of English (JTEs) and foreign assistant language
teachers (ALTs), as well as their team-teaching practices in Japan.
This edited book is innovative in that 14 original empirical
studies offer a comprehensive overview of the day-to-day
professional experiences and realities of these team teachers in
Japan, with its focus on their cognitive, ideological, and
affective components. This is a multifaceted exploration into team
teachers in their gestalt—who they are to themselves and in
relation to their students, colleagues, community members, and
crucially to their teaching partners. This book, therefore, offers
several empirical and practical applications for future endeavors
involving team teachers and those who engage with them—including
their key stakeholders, such as researchers on them, their teacher
educators, local boards of education, governments, and language
learners from around the world.
This book provides insights for both native language teachers and
local language teachers alike who conduct team-taught lessons by
revisiting the topic of foreign assistant language teachers (ALTs),
the Japan Exchange and Teaching (JET) program, and team teaching.
This book is innovative in that (a) it is the first to elucidate
ALTs' experiences comprehensively, across both historical time
(i.e., prior to, during, and after the JET program) and social
space (i.e., inside and outside the school), thereby revealing
their multiple identities that they come to construct and
reconstruct over time, and (b) it explores the meanings and
perspectives of particular phenomena that ALTs experience within
their specific social settings from their own individual points of
view. This inquiry does this by using personal narrative accounts
gathered from multiple participants. Through these narrative
accounts, Hiratsuka formulates a conceptualization of ALT identity,
an effort that has hitherto been neglected. As a consequence, this
book offers several practical and empirical applications of the
conceptualization to future endeavors involving native language
teachers and those who engage with them, including the key
stakeholders of local language teachers, their local boards of
education, the governments, and language learners across the globe.
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