"We want to bring them into what we love"| An investigation of desire in two alternative teacher preparation programs

<p> A great deal depends on preparing high quality teachers, and reformers of teacher preparation have recently drawn attention to the need for clearer delineations of effective practice, what it takes to be a teacher, and standards of preparation. Taken together, these reform proposals arguab...

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Main Author: Renga, Ian Parker
Language:EN
Published: University of Colorado at Boulder 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=3743632
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spelling ndltd-PROQUEST-oai-pqdtoai.proquest.com-37436322016-01-01T04:00:36Z "We want to bring them into what we love"| An investigation of desire in two alternative teacher preparation programs Renga, Ian Parker Education|Teacher education <p> A great deal depends on preparing high quality teachers, and reformers of teacher preparation have recently drawn attention to the need for clearer delineations of effective practice, what it takes to be a teacher, and standards of preparation. Taken together, these reform proposals arguably frame a professional ideal for teaching. How this ideal and other ideals are established as desirable for beginning teachers during preparation remains relatively unexplored. In this study I thus tease out the desired ideals of teaching in two alternative residency-based teacher preparation programs, City Teacher Prep (CTP) and a Montessori teacher training program (MONT). Drawing from literature in the humanities and the learning sciences, I develop a conceptual framework of desire as socially constructed and conveyed to beginning teachers through <i> orienting narratives</i> that serve to direct them toward desired objects of teaching. I also postulate that beginners develop desires by making <i> heartfelt investments</i> in those objects. I use a constructivist grounded theory approach to collect and analyze observation and interview data. My findings reveal differences in the desired objects at each program suggestive of a tension between a professional ideal and vocational ideal of teaching. I also find evidence of <i>standing</i> desires for leadership among beginners at both programs that could result in their eventually leaving teaching. Through this investigation, I illuminate the conceptual features of desire and show how it can inform our understanding of teacher preparation.</p> University of Colorado at Boulder 2015-12-31 00:00:00.0 thesis http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=3743632 EN
collection NDLTD
language EN
sources NDLTD
topic Education|Teacher education
spellingShingle Education|Teacher education
Renga, Ian Parker
"We want to bring them into what we love"| An investigation of desire in two alternative teacher preparation programs
description <p> A great deal depends on preparing high quality teachers, and reformers of teacher preparation have recently drawn attention to the need for clearer delineations of effective practice, what it takes to be a teacher, and standards of preparation. Taken together, these reform proposals arguably frame a professional ideal for teaching. How this ideal and other ideals are established as desirable for beginning teachers during preparation remains relatively unexplored. In this study I thus tease out the desired ideals of teaching in two alternative residency-based teacher preparation programs, City Teacher Prep (CTP) and a Montessori teacher training program (MONT). Drawing from literature in the humanities and the learning sciences, I develop a conceptual framework of desire as socially constructed and conveyed to beginning teachers through <i> orienting narratives</i> that serve to direct them toward desired objects of teaching. I also postulate that beginners develop desires by making <i> heartfelt investments</i> in those objects. I use a constructivist grounded theory approach to collect and analyze observation and interview data. My findings reveal differences in the desired objects at each program suggestive of a tension between a professional ideal and vocational ideal of teaching. I also find evidence of <i>standing</i> desires for leadership among beginners at both programs that could result in their eventually leaving teaching. Through this investigation, I illuminate the conceptual features of desire and show how it can inform our understanding of teacher preparation.</p>
author Renga, Ian Parker
author_facet Renga, Ian Parker
author_sort Renga, Ian Parker
title "We want to bring them into what we love"| An investigation of desire in two alternative teacher preparation programs
title_short "We want to bring them into what we love"| An investigation of desire in two alternative teacher preparation programs
title_full "We want to bring them into what we love"| An investigation of desire in two alternative teacher preparation programs
title_fullStr "We want to bring them into what we love"| An investigation of desire in two alternative teacher preparation programs
title_full_unstemmed "We want to bring them into what we love"| An investigation of desire in two alternative teacher preparation programs
title_sort "we want to bring them into what we love"| an investigation of desire in two alternative teacher preparation programs
publisher University of Colorado at Boulder
publishDate 2015
url http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=3743632
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