TY - JOUR
T1 - Teacher agency and professional learning
T2 - Rethinking fidelity of implementation as multiplicities of enactment
AU - Buxton, Cory A.
AU - Allexsaht-Snider, Martha
AU - Kayumova, Shakhnoza
AU - Aghasaleh, Rouhollah
AU - Choi, Youn Jeng
AU - Cohen, Allan
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2015 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
PY - 2015/4/1
Y1 - 2015/4/1
N2 - In this paper we use practice theory, with its focus on the interplay of structure and agency, to theorize about teacher engagement in professional learning and teacher enactment of pedagogical practices as an alternative to framing implementation research in terms of program adherence and fidelity of implementation. Practice theory allowed us to reconsider assumptions about characteristics of effective teacher professional learning, and to rethink our own notions of agency. Using data from our three-year middle school science teacher professional learning project, Language-rich Inquiry Science with English Language Learners (LISELL), we discuss how individual teachers negotiated power structures of schooling and exerted their agency in ways that were influenced by their project participation. Framing our work in terms of engagement and enactment, we theorize about how a structure-agency dialectic challenging assumptions about effective teacher professional learning can support new ways of thinking about implementation research in education.
AB - In this paper we use practice theory, with its focus on the interplay of structure and agency, to theorize about teacher engagement in professional learning and teacher enactment of pedagogical practices as an alternative to framing implementation research in terms of program adherence and fidelity of implementation. Practice theory allowed us to reconsider assumptions about characteristics of effective teacher professional learning, and to rethink our own notions of agency. Using data from our three-year middle school science teacher professional learning project, Language-rich Inquiry Science with English Language Learners (LISELL), we discuss how individual teachers negotiated power structures of schooling and exerted their agency in ways that were influenced by their project participation. Framing our work in terms of engagement and enactment, we theorize about how a structure-agency dialectic challenging assumptions about effective teacher professional learning can support new ways of thinking about implementation research in education.
KW - bilingual education
KW - language of science and classrooms
KW - science teacher education
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84925411822&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1002/tea.21223
DO - 10.1002/tea.21223
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84925411822
SN - 0022-4308
VL - 52
SP - 489
EP - 502
JO - Journal of Research in Science Teaching
JF - Journal of Research in Science Teaching
IS - 4
ER -