Epistemological Shudders as Productive Aporia: A Heuristic for Transformative Teacher Learning

Epistemological shudders offer teachers and researchers a valuable heuristic to gain new perspectives on classroom dynamics. As a means for reflexivity, they involve turning one's reflexive gaze on discourse. Although this shudder metaphor has been used to produce puzzles and paradoxes to explo...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Jennifer Charteris
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2014-02-01
Series:International Journal of Qualitative Methods
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/160940691401300102
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spelling doaj-9054a1800f8a4f8f8ec4996baa33daa02020-11-25T02:33:59ZengSAGE PublishingInternational Journal of Qualitative Methods1609-40692014-02-011310.1177/16094069140130010210.1177_160940691401300102Epistemological Shudders as Productive Aporia: A Heuristic for Transformative Teacher LearningJennifer CharterisEpistemological shudders offer teachers and researchers a valuable heuristic to gain new perspectives on classroom dynamics. As a means for reflexivity, they involve turning one's reflexive gaze on discourse. Although this shudder metaphor has been used to produce puzzles and paradoxes to explore regimes of truth in early childhood contexts, it remains under theorised. The study's conceptual framework utilises Judith Butler's notion of performativity which precludes a prediscursive autonomous subject. Butler's view suggests that identity is a continuous process of reiterating and resignifying one's position within and across discourses. Through this performance repetition, an illusion of a stable fixed identity is created. In keeping with a view of poststructural research which troubles or disrupts the “taken for granted” in the interests of social justice, the approach to discourse analysis taken in this study supports a deconstruction of unproblematised classroom discourse. During a research interview, the use of a discourse analysis tool prompted epistemological shudders that enabled a teacher to review her beliefs about how she positioned students in her classroom and the researcher to problematise essentialist notions of agency. The study illustrates how epistemological shudders can prompt teachers and researchers to trouble unquestioned assumptions as part of a dynamic learning process.https://doi.org/10.1177/160940691401300102
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jennifer Charteris
spellingShingle Jennifer Charteris
Epistemological Shudders as Productive Aporia: A Heuristic for Transformative Teacher Learning
International Journal of Qualitative Methods
author_facet Jennifer Charteris
author_sort Jennifer Charteris
title Epistemological Shudders as Productive Aporia: A Heuristic for Transformative Teacher Learning
title_short Epistemological Shudders as Productive Aporia: A Heuristic for Transformative Teacher Learning
title_full Epistemological Shudders as Productive Aporia: A Heuristic for Transformative Teacher Learning
title_fullStr Epistemological Shudders as Productive Aporia: A Heuristic for Transformative Teacher Learning
title_full_unstemmed Epistemological Shudders as Productive Aporia: A Heuristic for Transformative Teacher Learning
title_sort epistemological shudders as productive aporia: a heuristic for transformative teacher learning
publisher SAGE Publishing
series International Journal of Qualitative Methods
issn 1609-4069
publishDate 2014-02-01
description Epistemological shudders offer teachers and researchers a valuable heuristic to gain new perspectives on classroom dynamics. As a means for reflexivity, they involve turning one's reflexive gaze on discourse. Although this shudder metaphor has been used to produce puzzles and paradoxes to explore regimes of truth in early childhood contexts, it remains under theorised. The study's conceptual framework utilises Judith Butler's notion of performativity which precludes a prediscursive autonomous subject. Butler's view suggests that identity is a continuous process of reiterating and resignifying one's position within and across discourses. Through this performance repetition, an illusion of a stable fixed identity is created. In keeping with a view of poststructural research which troubles or disrupts the “taken for granted” in the interests of social justice, the approach to discourse analysis taken in this study supports a deconstruction of unproblematised classroom discourse. During a research interview, the use of a discourse analysis tool prompted epistemological shudders that enabled a teacher to review her beliefs about how she positioned students in her classroom and the researcher to problematise essentialist notions of agency. The study illustrates how epistemological shudders can prompt teachers and researchers to trouble unquestioned assumptions as part of a dynamic learning process.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/160940691401300102
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