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Learning from Counternarratives in Teach For America: Moving from Idealism Towards Hope New edition [Minkštas viršelis]

  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 230 pages, aukštis x plotis: 225x150 mm, weight: 370 g
  • Serija: Counterpoints 472
  • Išleidimo metai: 17-Jul-2015
  • Leidėjas: Peter Lang Publishing Inc
  • ISBN-10: 1433128128
  • ISBN-13: 9781433128127
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 230 pages, aukštis x plotis: 225x150 mm, weight: 370 g
  • Serija: Counterpoints 472
  • Išleidimo metai: 17-Jul-2015
  • Leidėjas: Peter Lang Publishing Inc
  • ISBN-10: 1433128128
  • ISBN-13: 9781433128127
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
The Teach for America program recruits high-performing recent college graduates as new teachers to “turn around” low-income, largely minority inner-city schools. It has been idolized and criticized. The author of this book holds a Master of Science in Education and is a former TFA instructor. She decided to look at TFA by measuring the success of its teachers. She surveyed her TFA cohort in the Greater Philadelphia region and used the results to develop this book. It documents a basic problem with the story of education TFA tells recruits: if impossible problems can be solved by inexperienced young people on their own if they simply work hard enough and have discipline, then when impossible problems prove impossible for one inexperienced young person to solve, they will believe the only real problem is them. This is a serious critique of the student experience of “bootstrap” education reform, but the author keeps her analysis to the teacher's role. Matsui documents the fatigue, shame, burnout, isolation, alcoholism, depression, and trauma of young teachers in her cohort, and records alternative stories in which no amount of teacher hard work and discipline makes children have similar grades as their counterparts in neighborhoods and schools that are wealthier, whiter, less crowded, safer, and better served. She concludes that TFA and similar education reform programs currently depend on widespread unrealistic superhero romances about what teaching is. Belief in these stories makes teachers personally responsible for problems they cannot solve, and isolates and deprofessionalizes teachers in America. More realistic stories about teaching, Matsui concludes, are more hopeful; they do more practical good for students, teachers, and society. Annotation ©2015 Ringgold, Inc., Portland, OR (protoview.com)

Recenzijos

«Sarah Matsuis book offers an unusually rich example of what practitioner knowledge and inquiry can contribute to critical conversations about educational equity and the toll that simplifications can take on teachers and, by extension, their students. Her intelligent and thoughtful narrative unpacks the complex interplay between TFAs persuasive discourse and the intense experiences of corps members as they grappled with profound gaps between expectations and their on-the-ground experiences as participants in the most highly touted reform of teacher education in recent history. Conducted with great sensitivity to their self-described conflicts and trauma of participation, Matsui's analyses and interpretations of her extensive interviews are informed by her considerable knowledge and insights as an insider, as well as her use of compelling interpretive frameworks drawn from a number of disciplines. The book is timely and provocative, a must-read for anyone who cares deeply about teaching, teacher education, and quality education for urban communities.» (Susan L. Lytle, Professor Emerita, University of Pennsylvania)

«Few elements of the education reform movement have been as polarizing as Teach For America. Critics of TFA have focused on its leadership, the inadequacy of the training, and the placement of recruits in mostly high-poverty minority schools, but Sarah Matsuis study opens a new and important window into why TFA deserves critical reconsideration. Matsui provides a detailed and revealing look at what it means to be a TFA recruit, including the pressures, challenges, and consequences for those recruits and the students they serve. This is a fair and complex work that contributes important nuance to how education reform is often misguided. Matsuis critical confrontation of TFA narratives and experiences calls for a re-imaging of what it means to become and be a teacher.» (P.L. Thomas, Associate Professor of Education, Furman University)

«Sarah Matsui has written an ambitious book that highlights the tensions and struggles that Teach For America corps members face during their tenure in Philadelphia schools. Through extensive interview and survey data, Matsui presents powerful counter narratives that engage many of the key questions and concerns that continue to circulate regarding TFA including how corps members negotiate various traumas, how they take up or resist the TFA discourse, how they address issues of race and privilege, and how they understand their own identities as teachers.» (Katherine Crawford-Garrett, Assistant Professor of Teacher Education, Educational Leadership, and Policy, University of New Mexico)

«In this book, Sarah Matsui deeply captures the experiences and struggles of teachers who enter the teaching force through Teach For America. Matsuis thoughtful exploration of corps members stories and experiences, along with her own, helps us not just understand the challenges particular to teaching in TFA, but also the challenges and struggles of teaching in contexts, macro and micro, that under-support and deprofessionalize teachers. From the carefully analyzed self-reports of corps members, we learn so much about the personal and professional struggles that they experience. From this deep, contextualized look into their insider experiences, which Matsui examines using multiple interpretive frameworks, can come vital learning that is hopeful and promising for teachers and those who educate and work to support them.» (Sharon M. Ravitch, Senior Lecturer, University of Pennsylvania) «Sarah Matsuis book offers an unusually rich example of what practitioner knowledge and inquiry can contribute to critical conversations about educational equity and the toll that simplifications can take on teachers and, by extension, their students. Her intelligent and thoughtful narrative unpacks the complex interplay between TFAs persuasive discourse and the intense experiences of corps members as they grappled with profound gaps between expectations and their on-the-ground experiences as participants in the most highly touted reform of teacher education in recent history. Conducted with great sensitivity to their self-described conflicts and trauma of participation, Matsui's analyses and interpretations of her extensive interviews are informed by her considerable knowledge and insights as an insider, as well as her use of compelling interpretive frameworks drawn from a number of disciplines. The book is timely and provocative, a must-read for anyone who cares deeply about teaching, teacher education, and quality education for urban communities.» (Susan L. Lytle, Professor Emerita, University of Pennsylvania)

«Few elements of the education reform movement have been as polarizing as Teach For America. Critics of TFA have focused on its leadership, the inadequacy of the training, and the placement of recruits in mostly high-poverty minority schools, but Sarah Matsuis study opens a new and important window into why TFA deserves critical reconsideration. Matsui provides a detailed and revealing look at what it means to be a TFA recruit, including the pressures, challenges, and consequences for those recruits and the students they serve. This is a fair and complex work that contributes important nuance to how education reform is often misguided. Matsuis critical confrontation of TFA narratives and experiences calls for a re-imaging of what it means to become and be a teacher.» (P.L. Thomas, Associate Professor of Education, Furman University)

«Sarah Matsui has written an ambitious book that highlights the tensions and struggles that Teach For America corps members face during their tenure in Philadelphia schools. Through extensive interview and survey data, Matsui presents powerful counter narratives that engage many of the key questions and concerns that continue to circulate regarding TFA including how corps members negotiate various traumas, how they take up or resist the TFA discourse, how they address issues of race and privilege, and how they understand their own identities as teachers.» (Katherine Crawford-Garrett, Assistant Professor of Teacher Education, Educational Leadership, and Policy, University of New Mexico)

«In this book, Sarah Matsui deeply captures the experiences and struggles of teachers who enter the teaching force through Teach For America. Matsuis thoughtful exploration of corps members stories and experiences, along with her own, helps us not just understand the challenges particular to teaching in TFA, but also the challenges and struggles of teaching in contexts, macro and micro, that under-support and deprofessionalize teachers. From the carefully analyzed self-reports of corps members, we learn so much about the personal and professional struggles that they experience. From this deep, contextualized look into their insider experiences, which Matsui examines using multiple interpretive frameworks, can come vital learning that is hopeful and promising for teachers and those who educate and work to support them.» (Sharon M. Ravitch, Senior Lecturer, University of Pennsylvania)

Acknowledgments vii
Chapter 1 Counternarratives and the Complexity of a Fuller Truth
1(20)
Chapter 2 Examining the "TFA Script"
21(38)
Chapter 3 Unexpected Life Changes Teaching in TFA: Counseling, Medical Prescriptions, Weight Changes, Increased Alcohol Consumption, Strained Relationships, Fatigue
59(20)
Chapter 4 The Reality of Trauma in TFA
79(18)
Chapter 5 TFA's Culture of Guilt and Shame
97(30)
Chapter 6 The Complex, Politicized Process of TFA and CM Identity Development
127(16)
Chapter 7 TFA Idealism and the Hero Teacher Narrative
143(30)
Chapter 8 Listening and Learning from Counternarratives: Moving From Idealism Towards Hope
173(12)
Appendix A Titles & Acronyms 185(2)
Appendix B Journal Reflection 187(6)
Appendix C Data Analysis 193(4)
Appendix D Recommendations to TFA Staff on What Can Be Done to Better Support TFA Greater Philadelphia CMs 197(8)
Appendix E Elle's E-mail 205(6)
Bibliography 211(12)
Index 223
Sarah Matsui holds a BA in urban studies and a MSEd In secondary math education from the University of Pennsylvania. She taught middle school math and is an alumna of the 2011 Teach for America Greater Philadelphia Cohort.