This book critically explores pedagogical activities, policies, and coursework that teacher education programs can provide to more fully prepare teacher candidates and in-service educators for professional practice in urban schools. It illustrates how teacher educators from across the United States are supporting teacher candidates and in-service teachers to possess the knowledge, skills, and dispositions for equity-oriented instructional practices and advocacy for professional engagement in the urban context.Chapters share insider perspectives of urban teacher education on preparing teachers to teach in culturally, linguistically, and socio-economically diverse classrooms. They discuss teacher educators’ learning about their own practice in the preparation of teachers for city schools, preparing teacher candidates from rural and suburban contexts to teach in urban settings, and supervising practicing teachers in city classrooms. The volume also focuses on the interplay of cultural and linguistic parity between teacher educators and their preservice/in-service teacher students, implementing learning activities or coursework about teaching in urban schools, and enacting critical pedagogical practices.
This book will be beneficial to teacher educators focused on teacher preparation for city classrooms and urban school districts, and researchers seeking to adopt self-study methodology in their own research endeavors.
Chapter 1. Self-Studies in Urban Teacher Education: An Introduction (Adrian D. Martin)
Part I. Preparing Teacher Educators and Teachers for Urban Education Contexts.
Chapter 2. Collectively Caring: Co-Creating a Critical Feminist Community of Justice-Oriented Teacher Educators (Monica Taylor et al)
Chapter 3. Tourist Teachers and Layers of Colonization: Lessons from New Mexico (Laura C. Haniford and Rebecca M. Sánchez)
Chapter 4. How Do We Praxis? Becoming Teachers of Diverse Learners in Urban Environments (Christi Edge and Chelsie Vipperman)
Part II. Race, Culture, and Urban Teacher Education
Chapter 5. Teaching Black: Common Eyes All See the Same (LaChan V. Hannon et al)
Chapter 6. Who gets to ask “Does race belong in every course?”: Staying in the anguish as White teacher educators (Megan Madigan Peercy and Judy Sharkey)
Part III. The Academic Content Areas and Urban Teacher Education
Chapter 7. A self-study in PreK-4 science teacher preparation: Supporting teacher candidates’ professional development and critical consciousness using science as the context (Shondricka Burrell)
Chapter 8. A Closer Look at Equitable Outcomes: A Self-Study in Urban Mathematics Teacher Education (Craig Wiley and Natalie Odom Pough)
Part IV. Rethinking the Boundaries of Online, Rural, and Urban Teacher Education
Chapter 9. Reimagining My Self-in-Practice: Relational Teacher Education in a Remote Setting (Brianne Morettini)
Chapter 10. Not to Simply Intervene, but to Enact the Between: Urban Teacher Education as an Intra-Active Process (Mary F. Rice and Mariana Casteñon)
Chapter 11. Materiality, Affect, and Diverse Educational Settings: A Collaborative Inquiry Between Urban and Rural Teacher Educators (Adrian D. Martin and Tammy Mills)
Adrian D. Martin, Ph.D. is a faculty member in the College of Education at New Jersey City University. Dr. Martin’s scholarship explores multiple facets of teacher education and development, pedagogical theorization, and qualitative research methodology. His publications shed light on the experiences of English Learners and teachers of English Learners, issues in teacher education, teacher identity and teacher educator identity, teachers in urban early childhood classrooms, and novice urban educators’ entry into the teaching profession. Dr. Martin is an active member of the American Educational Research Association and the Self-Study of Teacher Education Practices Special Interest Group.
This book critically explores pedagogical activities, policies, and coursework that teacher education programs can provide to more fully prepare teacher candidates and in-service educators for professional practice in urban schools. It illustrates how teacher educators from across the United States are supporting teacher candidates and in-service teachers to possess the knowledge, skills, and dispositions for equity-oriented instructional practices and advocacy for professional engagement in the urban context.
Chapters share insider perspectives of urban teacher education on preparing teachers to teach in culturally, linguistically, and socio-economically diverse classrooms. They discuss teacher educators’ learning about their own practice in the preparation of teachers for city schools, preparing teacher candidates from rural and suburban contexts to teach in urban settings, and supervising practicing teachers in city classrooms. The volume also focuses on the interplay of cultural and linguistic parity between teacher educators and their preservice/in-service teacher students, implementing learning activities or coursework about teaching in urban schools, and enacting critical pedagogical practices.
This book will be beneficial to teacher educators focused on teacher preparation for city classrooms and urban school districts, and researchers seeking to adopt self-study methodology in their own research endeavors.