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Addressing the critical issue of teacher identity tensions, this edited volume looks at the tensions between teachers’ instructional beliefs, values, and priorities, and the contextual constraints and requirements.
“This timely collection of works addresses a key issue in language teacher education. In the volume, colleagues have engaged with language teachers’ identity development and tensions in a variety of contexts such as Australia, Hong Kong, Kuwait and the US. They have also explored how this identity issue can be approached and addressed in language teacher education programs with significant implications for language teachers’ professional practice, well-being and growth.”
Andy Gao, University of New South Wales, Australia
“Zia Tajeddin and Bedrettin Yazan have presented an impressive collection of papers that shed light on some real tensions in the construction, negotiation, and maintenance of language teacher identity. Connecting three key ideas – agency, emotion, and investment – is a welcome addition to contemporary discussions of identity in language teaching and teacher education. I am confident that graduate students, language teachers, and teacher educators will encounter many thought-provoking ideas between the covers of this book.”
Anwar Ahmed, University of British Columbia, Canada
“In this timely and much-needed volume, Zia Tajeddin and Bedrettin Yazan curated chapters that present novel research on language teacher identity tensions. Drawing our attention to the fact that teacher identity is not shaped in a linear and conflict-free manner, the chapter authors examine tensions in identity, emotions, ideology and agency as key factors in influencing teachers’ professional growth and practices. The book is a must-read for teachers, teacher educators, and school administrators around the world.”
Anna Krulatz, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Norway
“This volume brings together a burgeoning strand of research that foregrounds how teachers’ work in multilingual classrooms is intrinsically shaped by who they are in the world. Language is central to identity, but language is also a site of struggle. By centering the tensions that language teachers confront, Language Teacher Identity Tensions contributes to our understanding of how individuals’ lived experiences as language users, language teachers, and language learners form their professional identities.”
Peter Sayer, The Ohio State University, USA
Teacher identity tensions: An overview Section One: Tensions and Teacher Identity Construction 1. Making sense of teacher identity tensions through critical autoethnographic narrative: Pedagogizing identity in teacher education 2. Systemic tensions and ESOL teacher identity development: From affinity to disaffinity 3. Negotiating tensions between aspired and practiced identities: An Australian case of agency in language–content teacher collaboration 4. Age and Nationality: Identity Tensions in Kuwait 5. Borderland negotiations of personal-professional identity: South Korean university-level language educators in Japan 6. Raciolinguistic tensions in translingual and transnational identity as pedagogy 7. Barriers to entry as barriers to identity: Short stories of the struggles of ethnic minority English language teachers to enter teaching in Hong Kong Section Two: Identity Tensions and Teacher Education 8. Identity Tensions in Teacher Education 9. Understanding and promoting inclusive TESOL through participatory community engagements: A duoethnographic study 10. “I Am Not the Other”: A Yazidi American Teacher’s Identity Work 11. Navigating identities, tensions, and (non)agentive positions in a TESOL graduate course: A case study of one multilingual ESOL pre-service teacher Section Three: Identity Tensions and Teacher Beliefs and Practices 12. Language teachers’ gendered identity: Unpacking tensions in agency, instructional practice, and professional development 13. Enacting well-being: Identity and agency tensions for two TESOL educators14. Language teacher professional values, identity tensions, and agentive actions in the adult ESL setting 15. Negotiating identity tensions through feeling power. Epilogue.
Zia Tajeddin is a Professor of Applied Linguistics at the Department of English Language Teaching at Tarbiat Modares University, Iran. His main areas of research include language teacher education, L2 pragmatics instruction and assessment, and intercultural language teaching in the context of English as an International Language (ELF).
Bedrettin Yazan is associate professor in the Department of Bicultural-Bilingual Studies at the University of Texas at San Antonio. His research focuses on language teacher learning and identity, language policy and planning, and world Englishes. Methodologically he is interested in critical autoethnography, narrative inquiry, and qualitative case study.