Situated Hope: Understanding Teacher Educators' Notions of Hope
abstract: This study examines teacher educators' understandings of hope related to teacher education. The study provides a previously unforeseen perspective on teacher educators' hope or lack of hope, and gives insight into that hope's foundation and maintenance. I have designed and...
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2011
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ndltd-asu.edu-item-92202018-06-22T03:01:50Z Situated Hope: Understanding Teacher Educators' Notions of Hope abstract: This study examines teacher educators' understandings of hope related to teacher education. The study provides a previously unforeseen perspective on teacher educators' hope or lack of hope, and gives insight into that hope's foundation and maintenance. I have designed and implemented a rigorous multi-method study, beginning with developing and conducting a nationwide on-line survey with 625 participants. From a pool of 326 participants expressing interest in participating in interviews, I interviewed 23 teacher educators selected from a randomized and purposive sample. Finally, 25 participants took part in a writing prompt sent in lieu of an interview. Findings reflect that teacher educators' "hope" is a construct, a mixture of abstract ideas, emotions, dispositions, attitudes, that is hard to conceptualize or measure, but appears to be a very relevant and influential and hope for teacher educators takes place on a continuum from bystander to actualizing. The results of this study serve as a way to encourage educators to be more explicit about hope and discourses about teaching. It raises awareness about "false senses" of hope, which arise from narratives of redemption, paving the way for a conception of hope grounded in a strong understanding of the multiplicities of teaching, and how things "are." This conception of hope has the potential to foster discussions and actions of what education can be, rather than dwelling in the rhetoric of what education is not. Further, this research has the potential to open up spaces to discuss both the importance of and how to begin to think about incorporating hope into curricula through critical pedagogy and pedagogies of hope. Dissertation/Thesis Rivers, Melissa (Author) Fischman, Gustavo E (Advisor) Christine, Carol J (Committee member) Santos De Barona, Maryann (Committee member) Barone, Thomas (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Teacher Education Critical Pedagogy Hope Multiple Methods Pedagogy of Hope eng 232 pages Ph.D. Curriculum and Instruction 2011 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.9220 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ All Rights Reserved 2011 |
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English |
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Doctoral Thesis |
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Teacher Education Critical Pedagogy Hope Multiple Methods Pedagogy of Hope |
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Teacher Education Critical Pedagogy Hope Multiple Methods Pedagogy of Hope Situated Hope: Understanding Teacher Educators' Notions of Hope |
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abstract: This study examines teacher educators' understandings of hope related to teacher education. The study provides a previously unforeseen perspective on teacher educators' hope or lack of hope, and gives insight into that hope's foundation and maintenance. I have designed and implemented a rigorous multi-method study, beginning with developing and conducting a nationwide on-line survey with 625 participants. From a pool of 326 participants expressing interest in participating in interviews, I interviewed 23 teacher educators selected from a randomized and purposive sample. Finally, 25 participants took part in a writing prompt sent in lieu of an interview. Findings reflect that teacher educators' "hope" is a construct, a mixture of abstract ideas, emotions, dispositions, attitudes, that is hard to conceptualize or measure, but appears to be a very relevant and influential and hope for teacher educators takes place on a continuum from bystander to actualizing. The results of this study serve as a way to encourage educators to be more explicit about hope and discourses about teaching. It raises awareness about "false senses" of hope, which arise from narratives of redemption, paving the way for a conception of hope grounded in a strong understanding of the multiplicities of teaching, and how things "are." This conception of hope has the potential to foster discussions and actions of what education can be, rather than dwelling in the rhetoric of what education is not. Further, this research has the potential to open up spaces to discuss both the importance of and how to begin to think about incorporating hope into curricula through critical pedagogy and pedagogies of hope. === Dissertation/Thesis === Ph.D. Curriculum and Instruction 2011 |
author2 |
Rivers, Melissa (Author) |
author_facet |
Rivers, Melissa (Author) |
title |
Situated Hope: Understanding Teacher Educators' Notions of Hope |
title_short |
Situated Hope: Understanding Teacher Educators' Notions of Hope |
title_full |
Situated Hope: Understanding Teacher Educators' Notions of Hope |
title_fullStr |
Situated Hope: Understanding Teacher Educators' Notions of Hope |
title_full_unstemmed |
Situated Hope: Understanding Teacher Educators' Notions of Hope |
title_sort |
situated hope: understanding teacher educators' notions of hope |
publishDate |
2011 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.9220 |
_version_ |
1718699645560946688 |