Teacher Educators as Disruptors Redesigning Courses in Teacher Preparation Programs to Prepare white Preservice Teachers

Many institutions of higher education, and their teacher preparation programs, have mission or core value statements that include terms such as diversity, equity, or social justice. The terms are meant to suggest an inclusive approach but it’s often difficult to see how those terms are operationali...

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Main Authors: Shamaine Kyann Bertrand, Kisha Porcher
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: OpenED Network 2020-06-01
Series:Journal of Culture and Values in Education
Subjects:
Online Access:https://cultureandvalues.org/index.php/JCV/article/view/72
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spelling doaj-b03c25bfe74d494cb9025a7139e803112020-11-25T03:54:43ZengOpenED NetworkJournal of Culture and Values in Education2590-342X2020-06-013110.46303/jcve.03.01.5Teacher Educators as Disruptors Redesigning Courses in Teacher Preparation Programs to Prepare white Preservice TeachersShamaine Kyann Bertrand0Kisha Porcher1Illinois State UniversityUniversity of Delaware Many institutions of higher education, and their teacher preparation programs, have mission or core value statements that include terms such as diversity, equity, or social justice. The terms are meant to suggest an inclusive approach but it’s often difficult to see how those terms are operationalized. As two Black pre-tenure faculty members working in predominantly white institutions (PWIs), we have pushed our teacher preparation programs to go beyond putting keywords in mission statements and provide ways to follow through so future teachers can enact the concepts in their classrooms. We use Self-Study in Teacher Education Practices (S-STEP) and Critical Race Theory (CRT) to make meaning of our own narratives, the systems that negatively impact people of color, and signaling words within our teacher preparation programs. We use the data from our personal narratives to discuss ways junior faculty can act as disruptors to ensure white preservice teachers are better prepared for the field.   https://cultureandvalues.org/index.php/JCV/article/view/72teacher preparationpre-tenure facultycritical race theoryself-studyBlack faculty
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Shamaine Kyann Bertrand
Kisha Porcher
spellingShingle Shamaine Kyann Bertrand
Kisha Porcher
Teacher Educators as Disruptors Redesigning Courses in Teacher Preparation Programs to Prepare white Preservice Teachers
Journal of Culture and Values in Education
teacher preparation
pre-tenure faculty
critical race theory
self-study
Black faculty
author_facet Shamaine Kyann Bertrand
Kisha Porcher
author_sort Shamaine Kyann Bertrand
title Teacher Educators as Disruptors Redesigning Courses in Teacher Preparation Programs to Prepare white Preservice Teachers
title_short Teacher Educators as Disruptors Redesigning Courses in Teacher Preparation Programs to Prepare white Preservice Teachers
title_full Teacher Educators as Disruptors Redesigning Courses in Teacher Preparation Programs to Prepare white Preservice Teachers
title_fullStr Teacher Educators as Disruptors Redesigning Courses in Teacher Preparation Programs to Prepare white Preservice Teachers
title_full_unstemmed Teacher Educators as Disruptors Redesigning Courses in Teacher Preparation Programs to Prepare white Preservice Teachers
title_sort teacher educators as disruptors redesigning courses in teacher preparation programs to prepare white preservice teachers
publisher OpenED Network
series Journal of Culture and Values in Education
issn 2590-342X
publishDate 2020-06-01
description Many institutions of higher education, and their teacher preparation programs, have mission or core value statements that include terms such as diversity, equity, or social justice. The terms are meant to suggest an inclusive approach but it’s often difficult to see how those terms are operationalized. As two Black pre-tenure faculty members working in predominantly white institutions (PWIs), we have pushed our teacher preparation programs to go beyond putting keywords in mission statements and provide ways to follow through so future teachers can enact the concepts in their classrooms. We use Self-Study in Teacher Education Practices (S-STEP) and Critical Race Theory (CRT) to make meaning of our own narratives, the systems that negatively impact people of color, and signaling words within our teacher preparation programs. We use the data from our personal narratives to discuss ways junior faculty can act as disruptors to ensure white preservice teachers are better prepared for the field.  
topic teacher preparation
pre-tenure faculty
critical race theory
self-study
Black faculty
url https://cultureandvalues.org/index.php/JCV/article/view/72
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