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Sexual Orientation and Teacher Identity
Professionalism and LGBTQ Politics in Teacher Preparation and Practice
Sexual Orientation and Teacher Identity
Professionalism and LGBTQ Politics in Teacher Preparation and Practice
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Description
Sexual Orientation and Teacher Identity: Professionalism and GLBT Politics in Teacher Preparation and Practice examines the nature of LGBTQ issues and teacher identity as social, cultural, and political constructs. In particular, the contributing authors to this collection of chapters present a collection of chapters (contemporary discourses) that will illuminate and critique the practices, structures, and politics in both teacher preparation programs and public school settings that affect LGBTQ teachers and their identity in relation to the struggles of teachers as professionals face in obtaining recognition. The contributing authors of the book focus on teachers are entering educational settings where difference connotes not equal, and discourses of LGBTQ politics, identity, and difference are interwoven with a realization of discrimination and marginalization. The authors, drawing on their personal and professional experiences, give much needed voice to recognition and the formation of identity from a LGBTQ viewpoint as they relate to teachers, teacher educators, and other cultural workers responsible for shaping professional identities of teachers and for teaching students in schools and classrooms across the nation.
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements
Chapter 1– Negotiating Identity as Teacher—A Critical Pedagogy of Learning to Teach
Patrick M. Jenlink
Chapter 2– Performativity and Disidentification: Subverting Identity Politics Through Stereotypical Embrace or Rejection
Adam j. Greteman & Ira David Socol
Chapter 3– LGBT Teacher Identity: Transgressing the Linear and Into the Spherical Identity Model
Megan S. Kennedy
Chapter 4– Understanding and Undermining Heteronormativity
Heather Hickman
Chapter 5– Shh . . . Out: From Silence to Self—How Experiences as Gay and Lesbian Teachers Inform Teaching
Jana Jackson
Chapter 6– Teachers as Sexual Strangers
Steve Fifield
Chapter 7– The Personal is Professional: Understanding Schools as Cultural Institutions through the Identities of Mother/Educator/Lesbian
Laura A. Bower
Chapter 8– Dismantling Straight Privilege: Alternate Conceptions of Identity and Education
Tonette S. Rocco, Hilary Landorf, and Suzanne Gallagher
Chapter 9– GLBT, Teacher Identity and the Pre-service Teacher
Stephanie Lynn Daza
Chapter 10– Epilogue: Sexual Orientation, Identity Politics, and Teaching: LGBTQ Teacher Identities (Re) considered
Patrick M. Jenlink
Editor and Authors
Product details
Published | 26 Nov 2019 |
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Format | Ebook (PDF) |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 1 |
ISBN | 9798216244103 |
Imprint | Rowman & Littlefield Publishers |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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A powerful and timely collection that uses a LGBTQ perspective to interrogate the normative ideological effects of heteronormativity on teacher educators and preservice and practicing teachers, especially when transgressing the inherent reproductive conservatism of public schools. This books calls for a deep equity by advancing research and scholarship as to how a critical pedagogy of identity can improve teaching and teacher education. Viewed through an intersectional lens of LGBTQ and teacher identities along with pedagogy, each chapter offers educators at all levels a transformative standpoint on teaching and learning.
Michael Vavrus, Professor Emeritus, The Evergreen State College; Past-president of the Association of Liberal Arts Colleges for Teacher Education
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In this edited volume, Patrick Jenlink introduces authors who critically engage issues of identity for LGBTQ teachers, student teachers, and students in k-12 and teacher education spaces. Utilizing the voices of LGBTQ teachers and student teachers, authors trouble the reader’s conception of teacher identity and provide nuanced snapshots of the impacts of heteronormativity, coming out stories, and straight privilege that will certainly influence teacher education/teaching practices in various classroom spaces. Throughout the book, authors take up queer and other critical theories to nuance teacher identity models and offer students an opportunity to affirm their multiple identities, whether or not those identities include queer. As Jenlink asserts, “there is a need for a pedagogy of identity that understands the necessity of providing a space within which one can become the author of one’s own interpretation of one’s identity as teacher.” This combination of theory, practice, and student/teacher voices – that also highlights the importance of identity as performance – makes this book a must read for those across the teacher preparation landscape.
J.B. Mayo, Associate Professor, Social Studies Education; Associate Chair, Department of Curriculum & Instruction, University of Minnesota
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Sexual Orientation and Teacher Identity: Professionalism and LGBTQ Politics in Teacher Preparation and Practice offers a glimpse into the work of teachers as they negotiate the complex and contradictory ways their educator and LGBTQ identities develop and intersect. The chapters contributed to this volume demonstrate the generative work that teachers can do to disrupt heteronormativity that manifests in everyday language, textbooks, binary thinking, moralizing, as well as silences. Moreover, this book illustrates the ways teachers' identities are policed and restructured across contexts as they reveal social and institutional discourses about "normal" ways of being and knowing.
Susan W. Woolley, Assistant Professor of Educational Studies; Interim Director of Women's Studies Program, Colgate University