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Learning to Teach English and the Language Arts
A Vygotskian Perspective on Beginning Teachers’ Pedagogical Concept Development
Learning to Teach English and the Language Arts
A Vygotskian Perspective on Beginning Teachers’ Pedagogical Concept Development
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Description
Drawing together Smagorinsky's extensive research over a 20-year period, Learning to Teach English and the Language Arts explores how beginning teachers' pedagogical concepts are shaped by a variety of influences. Challenging popular thinking about the binary roles of teacher education programs and school-based experiences in the process of learning to teach, Smagorinsky illustrates, through case studies in the disciplines of English and the Language Arts, that teacher education programs and classroom/school contexts are not discrete contexts for learning about teaching, nor are each of these contexts unified in the messages they offer about teaching. He explores the tensions, not only between these contexts and others, but within them to illustrate the social, cultural, contextual, political and historical complexity of learning to teach. Smagorinsky revisits familiar theoretical understandings, including Vygotsky's concept development and Lortie's apprenticeship of observation, to consider their implications for teachers today and to examine what teacher candidates learn during their teacher education experiences and how that learning shapes their development as teachers.
Table of Contents
Introduction
1. Vygotsky and Concept Development
2. Methodological Implications of Taking a Vygotskian Approach to Teacher Development
3. An Updated Perspective on the Apprenticeship of Observation
4. Concept Development in Teacher Education Coursework and Practica
5. Cultures of Color and the Deep Structure of Schools
6. Fuzzy Concepts in Teacher Education and their Consequences in the Classroom
7. Policy, Practice, and Disruptions in Concept Development
8. School Settings and Course Assignments in Shaping Conceptions of Curriculum and Instruction
9. Competing Centers of Gravity within Settings of Learning to Teach
10. Learning to Teach Grammar at the Intersection of Formalism and Flexibility
11. Community Contexts and their Societal Settings, and How They Shape Practice
Conclusion
References
Index
Product details

Published | 16 Apr 2020 |
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Format | Ebook (PDF) |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 264 |
ISBN | 9781350142909 |
Imprint | Bloomsbury Academic |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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Smagorinsky takes the well-worn battle between theory and practice in teacher education and blurs the distinctions. His case studies provide a rich source of evidence of how people learn to teach under the notion of concept development.
Bethan Marshall, Senior Lecturer, King's College London, UK
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Smagorinsky skillfully weaves together Vygotskian theory, case study research and pedagogical implication to offer an engaging, insightful examination of the many factors that shape the teaching of English and the language arts.
Melanie Shoffner, Associate Professor of English Education, James Madison University, USA

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