Struggling or a bilingual teacher: Identity formation in a Change Laboratory intervention

While the methodology of formative intervention research has long been established, the aspect of new instrumentality of Change Laboratory is fragmentally documented. Therefore, in this study, we modified two major Change Laboratory mediating tools used in bilingual student-teaching seminars, namely...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Sharon Chang, Carmen Martínez-Roldán, María E Torres-Guzmán
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2020-05-01
Series:Methodological Innovations
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2059799120921696
id doaj-d547c61b2cc94f1f8e7d4cee65a0e02a
record_format Article
spelling doaj-d547c61b2cc94f1f8e7d4cee65a0e02a2020-11-25T04:00:52ZengSAGE PublishingMethodological Innovations2059-79912020-05-011310.1177/2059799120921696Struggling or a bilingual teacher: Identity formation in a Change Laboratory interventionSharon ChangCarmen Martínez-RoldánMaría E Torres-GuzmánWhile the methodology of formative intervention research has long been established, the aspect of new instrumentality of Change Laboratory is fragmentally documented. Therefore, in this study, we modified two major Change Laboratory mediating tools used in bilingual student-teaching seminars, namely the disturbance diary and four-field model . These two empirically investigated Change Laboratory tools have mediated transformative agency within the collective movement toward identity formation as the Change Laboratory participants (bilingual preservice teachers) conveyed their dilemma of to-be or not-to-be a bilingual teacher. We provide evidence on the relationship between the bilingual preservice teachers’ identity formation and their participation in the Change Laboratory intervention. The analysis made salient the role of two new Change Laboratory mediating tools, the adapted disturbance diary and individually generated four-field models, for the bilingual preservice teachers’ collective transformation in bilingual teaching. It also crystallized the importance of deepening the bilingual preservice teachers’ analysis of multiple languages and pedagogy as understood in the new bilingual teaching model in the Change Laboratory intervention.https://doi.org/10.1177/2059799120921696
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sharon Chang
Carmen Martínez-Roldán
María E Torres-Guzmán
spellingShingle Sharon Chang
Carmen Martínez-Roldán
María E Torres-Guzmán
Struggling or a bilingual teacher: Identity formation in a Change Laboratory intervention
Methodological Innovations
author_facet Sharon Chang
Carmen Martínez-Roldán
María E Torres-Guzmán
author_sort Sharon Chang
title Struggling or a bilingual teacher: Identity formation in a Change Laboratory intervention
title_short Struggling or a bilingual teacher: Identity formation in a Change Laboratory intervention
title_full Struggling or a bilingual teacher: Identity formation in a Change Laboratory intervention
title_fullStr Struggling or a bilingual teacher: Identity formation in a Change Laboratory intervention
title_full_unstemmed Struggling or a bilingual teacher: Identity formation in a Change Laboratory intervention
title_sort struggling or a bilingual teacher: identity formation in a change laboratory intervention
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Methodological Innovations
issn 2059-7991
publishDate 2020-05-01
description While the methodology of formative intervention research has long been established, the aspect of new instrumentality of Change Laboratory is fragmentally documented. Therefore, in this study, we modified two major Change Laboratory mediating tools used in bilingual student-teaching seminars, namely the disturbance diary and four-field model . These two empirically investigated Change Laboratory tools have mediated transformative agency within the collective movement toward identity formation as the Change Laboratory participants (bilingual preservice teachers) conveyed their dilemma of to-be or not-to-be a bilingual teacher. We provide evidence on the relationship between the bilingual preservice teachers’ identity formation and their participation in the Change Laboratory intervention. The analysis made salient the role of two new Change Laboratory mediating tools, the adapted disturbance diary and individually generated four-field models, for the bilingual preservice teachers’ collective transformation in bilingual teaching. It also crystallized the importance of deepening the bilingual preservice teachers’ analysis of multiple languages and pedagogy as understood in the new bilingual teaching model in the Change Laboratory intervention.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2059799120921696
work_keys_str_mv AT sharonchang strugglingorabilingualteacheridentityformationinachangelaboratoryintervention
AT carmenmartinezroldan strugglingorabilingualteacheridentityformationinachangelaboratoryintervention
AT mariaetorresguzman strugglingorabilingualteacheridentityformationinachangelaboratoryintervention
_version_ 1724448708755456000