TY - JOUR
T1 - Deliberative teacher education beyond boundaries
T2 - discursive practices for eliciting gender awareness
AU - Mooney Simmie, Geraldine
AU - Lang, Manfred
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2017 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
PY - 2018/2/17
Y1 - 2018/2/17
N2 - This study uses boundary crossing in activity theory as one normative framework for opening a deliberative inquiry in new discursive spaces to elicit gender awareness in teachers’ practices. We illustrate this framework by drawing from data in one European teacher education project. Seven case studies were conducted and data were analysed from a convenience sample of teacher educators who alongside the authors acted as national coordinators for the project. Data sources included questionnaires of initial ratings, case study reports, transcripts of team meetings and interviews. A cluster analysis of ratings was guided in a step-wise manner and yielded two distinct cluster groups where one group of case studies had high ratings of gender-specific settings. This finding was then used in a qualitative interpretation of data sources for deeper contextual understandings of teacher educators’ perspectives. Gender-specific settings had a reported context of aspects in an activity system which three case studies grasped as school-based planning, pedagogical innovation and mentoring supports. The framework for analysis of higher order gender aspects showed success in distinguishing case studies with isolated views of gender. Findings also showed limitations in the partially restricted framing of gender as an activity system at the outset of the project and indicated in some instances, reluctant teacher educators. The study underscores the explanatory power of the framework adopted and opens up hypotheses for further research and consideration.
AB - This study uses boundary crossing in activity theory as one normative framework for opening a deliberative inquiry in new discursive spaces to elicit gender awareness in teachers’ practices. We illustrate this framework by drawing from data in one European teacher education project. Seven case studies were conducted and data were analysed from a convenience sample of teacher educators who alongside the authors acted as national coordinators for the project. Data sources included questionnaires of initial ratings, case study reports, transcripts of team meetings and interviews. A cluster analysis of ratings was guided in a step-wise manner and yielded two distinct cluster groups where one group of case studies had high ratings of gender-specific settings. This finding was then used in a qualitative interpretation of data sources for deeper contextual understandings of teacher educators’ perspectives. Gender-specific settings had a reported context of aspects in an activity system which three case studies grasped as school-based planning, pedagogical innovation and mentoring supports. The framework for analysis of higher order gender aspects showed success in distinguishing case studies with isolated views of gender. Findings also showed limitations in the partially restricted framing of gender as an activity system at the outset of the project and indicated in some instances, reluctant teacher educators. The study underscores the explanatory power of the framework adopted and opens up hypotheses for further research and consideration.
KW - activity theory
KW - boundary crossing
KW - cluster analysis
KW - deliberation
KW - gender
KW - qualitative interpretation
KW - Teacher education
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85029440552&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/13540602.2017.1370420
DO - 10.1080/13540602.2017.1370420
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85029440552
SN - 1354-0602
VL - 24
SP - 135
EP - 150
JO - Teachers and Teaching: Theory and Practice
JF - Teachers and Teaching: Theory and Practice
IS - 2
ER -