Abstract
This case study reported on student teachers’ and new teachers’ personal interpretations in their teaching practice, during and after an international teaching internship, and how this reflected on new teachers’ professional development. An international teaching experience interrupts existing, familiar ways of thinking or acting. The findings describe how the interruption of an international internship influenced student teachers’ and new teachers’ “personal interpretative frameworks” during their teacher training programme and transition from student to teacher. New teachers’ personal interpretative framework operates as a lens through which (new) tachers perceive their job situations, give meaning to it, and reflects the basis on which a beginning teacher grounds their personal decisions or judgements for action. This study used the concepts of (dis)continuity to describe how an international teaching experience influenced the student teachers’ existing professional beliefs, knowledge or skills during their attempts to cope with what they perceived as significant socio-cultural obstacles and challenges. Experiencing discontinuity raised beginning teachers’ awareness of aspects of their personal interpretative frameworks in various ways. Results show, that experiences of discontinuity marked limits or challenges in existing knowledge or beliefs that was previously taken for granted by the student teachers, making implicit professional beliefs explicit. The student teachers also recognized their personal or moral decisions were frequently based upon on existing teaching knowledge or skills from the Dutch teacher training programme. Such recognition enhanced their understanding that they had to make personal-moral choices how to use appropriate knowledge or skills in a cross-cultural context, or made them reflect on the type of teacher they want to become. In some cases, experiencing discontinuity also made the participants aware of an experiential continuum, as they recognized the value of this previous experience in their present teaching practice as new teachers. Experiential continuity raised an awareness of pedagogical content knowledge they valued, it helped the new teachers’ professional self-understanding of existential questions regarding the type of teacher they want to become, or gave comfort and helped them to make sense of problematic, challenging experiences in the present.
| Original language | English |
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| Qualification | Doctor of Philosophy |
| Awarding Institution |
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| Supervisors/Advisors |
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| Award date | 6 Jun 2018 |
| Publisher | |
| Print ISBNs | 978-94-6295-990-3 |
| Publication status | Published - 6 Jul 2018 |
Keywords
- teachers’ professional development
- teaching abroad
- boundary
- beliefs
- discontinuity
- experiential continuity