Beschreibung
With surprising candor, the authors of
crack open what it means to become and be a teacher in the twenty-first century United States.
Rezension
“This courageous exploration of what it means to be Teacher invites us to take our deepest selves to school. The brave and poetic educator authors empower by showing (not just telling about) ways to live beyond the limits of the ubiquitous traditional narratives of Teacher, inviting us to claim the power of self-definition as we choose which stories we believe about ourselves and about our students. Refreshingly honest and exquisitely crafted, (Re)narrating Teacher Identity can change the way you live in and out of school.”
Jan Burkins, co-author of Who’s Doing the Work?
“The icon of the controlled and controlling teacher, calm, sure and poised is repudiated in the accounts of these novice teachers, who reveal their anxieties and their anguish even as they extend themselves to the very edges of their effort and humor and compassion. Lensmire and Schick’s work with these students reveals the sustained sisterhood that supports this honesty about the challenge of learning to be a good teacher.”
Madeleine R. Grumet, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
“In the cold squeeze of market-based reforms in and out of public schools, six women find each other’s warm embrace as they re-search their becoming teachers. Lensmire and Schick permit us to see the power of writing (and talk) about our lives to disrupt the tidy production of Stepford teachers and to enable us to imagine ourselves as flesh and blood humans who teach.”
Patrick Shannon, Distinguished Professor of Education, Penn State University