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Murphy, M. Shaun; Pinnegar, Stefinee – Studying Teacher Education, 2011
Experience is fundamental in identity development. In research, concepts and issues around identity are shaped and confronted in moments of reflection. The act of reflection requires a backward attention to engender a present understanding and create future possibilities. Kim and Greene, and Young and Erickson capture this temporal aspect of…
Descriptors: Preservice Teacher Education, Beginning Teachers, Teacher Educators, Identification
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Pinnegar, Stefinee; Murphy, M. Shaun – Studying Teacher Education, 2011
Research exploring the process of becoming a teacher educator always reveals the difficult balancing act that developing an identity as a teacher educator involves and the articles in this issue do just that. The Rice and McNeil studies of teacher educator identity in this issue are very revealing; they were conducted from the perspective of…
Descriptors: Teacher Educators, Identification, Theories, Speech
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Murphy, M. Shaun; Pinnegar, Stefinee – Studying Teacher Education, 2011
When the authors consider the articles by Bullock and Ritter, and Clift through the lens of role theory, both show how identity is, in part, constrained by the definitions of the roles individuals are assigned or take up and is developed from a response to the perception of individuals by themselves as well as by others as they act within these…
Descriptors: Teacher Education Programs, Teacher Educators, Role Theory, Teacher Role
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Pinnegar, Stefinee; Murphy, M. Shaun – Studying Teacher Education, 2011
Role theory is based in a conception of a social world wherein various roles are either available or made available and those participating in such worlds shape their identity according to the roles that are made available to them. In positioning theory, Haare and van Langenhove (1998) suggest that teachers are always in the process of…
Descriptors: Teacher Education, Change Agents, Teacher Educators, Role Theory