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El. knyga: Language Teacher Identity in TESOL: Teacher Education and Practice as Identity Work

Edited by (University of Texas, USA), Edited by (The University of Texas at San Antonio, USA)

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This volume draws on empirical evidence to explore the interplay between language teacher identity (LTI) and professional learning and instruction in the field of TESOL. In doing so, it makes a unique contribution to the field of language teacher education.

By reconceptualizing teacher education, teaching, and ongoing teacher learning as a continuous, context-bound process of identity work, Language Teacher Identity in TESOL discusses how teacher identity serves as a framework for classroom practice, professional, and personal growth. Divided into five sections, the text explores key themes including narratives and writing; multimodal spaces; race, ethnicity, and language; teacher emotions; and teacher educator-researcher practices. The 15 chapters offer insight into the experiences of preservice teachers, in-service teachers, and teacher educators in global TESOL contexts including Canada, Japan, Korea, Norway, Sri Lanka, Turkey, the United Kingdom, and the United States.

This text will be an ideal resource for researchers, academics, and scholars interested in furthering their knowledge of concepts grounding LTI, as well as teachers and teacher educators seeking to implement identity-oriented approaches in their own pedagogical practices.

Recenzijos

On the seemingly well-travelled terrain of Language Teacher Identity work, this new collection distinguishes itself in several important ways. For one, greater awareness of LTI complexities and contingenciesof alignments and intersections less consideredhas been advanced through a remarkable range of geographical settings and sites of practice. The diversity and novelty of research methods and data types (dinner discussions, illustrated identity portraits, etc.) is an additional strength of this book. Perhaps most important are the innovative, identity-based pedagogies (emotional scaffolding, for example) that effectively bridge theory and practice across these insightful chapters. The editors are to be commended for bringing these contributors together in this inspiring LTI collection.

Brian Morgan, Glendon College, Toronto

How does the existing research base on language teacher identity (LTI) inform language teacher education practice? This question is at the heart of this edited volume. While noting the significant theoretical contributions in the LTI field, Yazan and Lindahl prod us to shift our gaze from focusing on research framework to classroom practice. What I find most attractive about Yazan and Lindahls work is placing the teachers and their identity work in practice at the center--a result of a dialogic relationship between researchers and classroom teachers. Ultimately, grounded in identity approach, bridging theory to practice allows teachers and researchers alike to place more emphasis on the role of reflexivity in understanding the self, the other, and the context in which learning and teaching occurs. The 15 chapters in this volume will continue to challenge what it means to promote practices of teacher identity work in the fields. Bravo to the contributors!

Gloria Park, Indiana University of Pennsylvania, USA

With a focus on identity in teacher education practices, Language teacher identity in TESOL: Teacher education and practice as identity work includes a wide range of theoretical constructs, innovative methodologies, and lived experiences. From intersectionality to otherization, from multiethnography to multimodality, from microaggressions to scaffolded emotions, this book is an inspiring addition to the growing language teacher identity literature.

Anne Feryok, University of Otago, New Zealand

As a collection of empirical research works informed by diverse conceptual frameworks, this book moves forward our discussion of teacher identity in the field of TESOL. It is a must-read for language researchers and teacher educators who are interested in understanding the complex issue of teacher identities and developing identity-oriented pedagogy for effective classroom teaching.

Rui Eric Yuan, The Education University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong

This robust volume assembles diverse perspectives on language teacher identity into an interesting and coherent whole. I consider it a vital resource for a range of stakeholders, notably language teacher educators who aspire to highlight identity in their curricular and instructional practices.

Jason Martel, Middlebury Institute of International Studies, California, USA On the seemingly well-travelled terrain of Language Teacher Identity work, this new collection distinguishes itself in several important ways. For one, greater awareness of LTI complexities and contingenciesof alignments and intersections less consideredhas been advanced through a remarkable range of geographical settings and sites of practice. The diversity and novelty of research methods and data types (dinner discussions, illustrated identity portraits, etc.) is an additional strength of this book. Perhaps most important are the innovative, identity-based pedagogies (emotional scaffolding, for example) that effectively bridge theory and practice across these insightful chapters. The editors are to be commended for bringing these contributors together in this inspiring LTI collection.

Brian Morgan, Glendon College, Toronto

How does the existing research base on language teacher identity (LTI) inform language teacher education practice? This question is at the heart of this edited volume. While noting the significant theoretical contributions in the LTI field, Yazan and Lindahl prod us to shift our gaze from focusing on research framework to classroom practice. What I find most attractive about Yazan and Lindahls work is placing the teachers and their identity work in practice at the center--a result of a dialogic relationship between researchers and classroom teachers. Ultimately, grounded in identity approach, bridging theory to practice allows teachers and researchers alike to place more emphasis on the role of reflexivity in understanding the self, the other, and the context in which learning and teaching occurs. The 15 chapters in this volume will continue to challenge what it means to promote practices of teacher identity work in the fields. Bravo to the contributors!

Gloria Park, Indiana University of Pennsylvania, USA

With a focus on identity in teacher education practices, Language teacher identity in TESOL: Teacher education and practice as identity work includes a wide range of theoretical constructs, innovative methodologies, and lived experiences. From intersectionality to otherization, from multiethnography to multimodality, from microaggressions to scaffolded emotions, this book is an inspiring addition to the growing language teacher identity literature.

Anne Feryok, University of Otago, New Zealand

As a collection of empirical research works informed by diverse conceptual frameworks, this book moves forward our discussion of teacher identity in the field of TESOL. It is a must-read for language researchers and teacher educators who are interested in understanding the complex issue of teacher identities and developing identity-oriented pedagogy for effective classroom teaching.

Rui Eric Yuan, The Education University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong

This robust volume assembles diverse perspectives on language teacher identity into an interesting and coherent whole. I consider it a vital resource for a range of stakeholders, notably language teacher educators who aspire to highlight identity in their curricular and instructional practices.

Jason Martel, Middlebury Institute of International Studies, California, USA



This collection offers a fresh outlook on how necessary identity work is for both teachers and teacher educators. Situated at the nexus of the personal, the professional, and the political, the chapters in this volume investigate complex identities of teachers, teacher educators, and researchers inside various educational settings using a variety of methodologies. As such, I believe the book makes a significant contribution to both teacher identity studies and teacher education research.

Brad Olsen, University of California, USA

Introduction. Language teacher learning and practice as identity work:
An overview of the field and this volume ; Part I. Teacher Identity Work in
Narratives and Writing ;
1. Repurposing Identity Reconstruction as
Transformative Pedagogy: Multilingual Teachers in The US First-Year
Composition Context;
2. Writing Narratives, Shifting Identities: Developing
Language Teacher Identity and Practice in Working with Students with
Limited/Interrupted Formal Education ;
3. At the Dinner Table: Pre-Service
EFL Teachers Identity Negotiations and Resources ; Part II. Teacher Identity
Work in Multimodal Spaces ;
4. Understanding Language Teacher Identity:
Digital Discursive Spaces in English Teacher Education and Development ;
5.
Multimodal Identity Construction of Technology-Using Language Teachers via
Stance Taking in an Online Learning Space ;
6. Unpacking professional
identity: The use of multimodal identity texts and duoethnographies in
language teacher education ; Part III. Teacher Identity Work vis-ą-vis Race,
Ethnicity, and Language ;
7. Reading, Writing, and Race: Sharing the
Narratives of Black TESOL Professionals;
8. Anti-Oppressive Pedagogy in
Language Teacher Education: A Collaborative Case Study of Identity Texts ;
9.
Reality check: Identity struggle and experiences of NESTs Living and Teaching
Abroad ; Part IV. Teacher Identity Work vis-ą-vis Teacher Emotions ;
10.
Teacher Emotion as Pedagogy: The Role of Emotions in Negotiating Pedagogy and
Teacher Identity ;
11. Identity, Noticing, and Emotion among Pre-Service
English Language Teachers;
12. Our Job, Too: International Full-time
Non-tenure-track Faculty, English Language Teacher Education, and Emotionally
Distressed Students in South Korea ; Part V. Teacher Identity Work in Teacher
Educator-Researcher Practices ;
13. Intercepting and Fluid Identities: From
Reflective Teacher Educators to Reflective Teachers ;
14. Strengths-Based
Mentoring for Preservice ESL Teacher Professional Identity Development: A
Self-Study of Teacher Education Practices ;
15. The Autoethnography of an
[ Re]-Emerging Researcher Identity and Its Impact on EAP Teaching Pedagogy ;
Bedrettin Yazan is Assistant Professor of Educational Linguistics at the University of Alabama, USA.

Kristen Lindahl is Associate Professor of TESOL/Applied Linguistics at the University of Texas at San Antonio, USA.