Speaking Ourselves: The Intersections of Women Educators' Personal and Professional Lives

This paper presents findings from interviews conducted with 33 women educators working at varying levels of education and in diverse fields, and who varied in terms of age, ethnicity, race, family structure, geographic location, and sexual orientation.i Semi-structured interviews, building on varian...

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Main Author: Leigh M. OBrien
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Arizona State University 2010-09-01
Series:Current Issues in Education
Subjects:
Online Access:https://cie.asu.edu/ojs/index.php/cieatasu/article/view/659
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spelling doaj-52952cf625e1400d8777017ee30de51e2021-09-02T17:36:12ZengArizona State UniversityCurrent Issues in Education1099-839X2010-09-01134Speaking Ourselves: The Intersections of Women Educators' Personal and Professional LivesLeigh M. OBrien0SUNY GeneseoThis paper presents findings from interviews conducted with 33 women educators working at varying levels of education and in diverse fields, and who varied in terms of age, ethnicity, race, family structure, geographic location, and sexual orientation.i Semi-structured interviews, building on variants of this question, Does who you are as person influence what you do as an educator and are there ways being an educator influences your life outside of work?, were conducted, tape recorded, and inductively analyzed. The themes uncovered suggest that women educators function as whole persons, aware of multiple intersections between their personal and professional lives. In a time of âteacher-proof,â scripted curricula, standardization, and other so-called reforms in the field of education, these findings remind us that teaching cannot be reduced to curricular guidelines and generic texts mandated from above. Rather, the diversity that teachers bring to the profession argues against a one-size fits-all model and for a contextualized pedagogy that cannot be limited to mere content dissemination.https://cie.asu.edu/ojs/index.php/cieatasu/article/view/659women educators
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Leigh M. OBrien
spellingShingle Leigh M. OBrien
Speaking Ourselves: The Intersections of Women Educators' Personal and Professional Lives
Current Issues in Education
women educators
author_facet Leigh M. OBrien
author_sort Leigh M. OBrien
title Speaking Ourselves: The Intersections of Women Educators' Personal and Professional Lives
title_short Speaking Ourselves: The Intersections of Women Educators' Personal and Professional Lives
title_full Speaking Ourselves: The Intersections of Women Educators' Personal and Professional Lives
title_fullStr Speaking Ourselves: The Intersections of Women Educators' Personal and Professional Lives
title_full_unstemmed Speaking Ourselves: The Intersections of Women Educators' Personal and Professional Lives
title_sort speaking ourselves: the intersections of women educators' personal and professional lives
publisher Arizona State University
series Current Issues in Education
issn 1099-839X
publishDate 2010-09-01
description This paper presents findings from interviews conducted with 33 women educators working at varying levels of education and in diverse fields, and who varied in terms of age, ethnicity, race, family structure, geographic location, and sexual orientation.i Semi-structured interviews, building on variants of this question, Does who you are as person influence what you do as an educator and are there ways being an educator influences your life outside of work?, were conducted, tape recorded, and inductively analyzed. The themes uncovered suggest that women educators function as whole persons, aware of multiple intersections between their personal and professional lives. In a time of âteacher-proof,â scripted curricula, standardization, and other so-called reforms in the field of education, these findings remind us that teaching cannot be reduced to curricular guidelines and generic texts mandated from above. Rather, the diversity that teachers bring to the profession argues against a one-size fits-all model and for a contextualized pedagogy that cannot be limited to mere content dissemination.
topic women educators
url https://cie.asu.edu/ojs/index.php/cieatasu/article/view/659
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