TY - JOUR
T1 - Rethinking Collective Reflection in Teacher Professional Development
AU - Segal, Aliza
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 American Association of Colleges for Teacher Education.
PY - 2024/3/1
Y1 - 2024/3/1
N2 - Collective reflection, which has become a de rigueur activity in teacher training and professional development, is predicated upon Schön’s theory of reflective practice. This concept, according to which people learn to be reflective-in-action through reflection on practice, relates primarily to individual and one-on-one mentorship processes. The shift from individual to collective processes has gone largely unstudied and unproblematized. This study of collective teacher reflection in a professional development workshop calls prevailing assumptions into question by bringing an alternative lens, textual trajectories, to bear on this ubiquitous activity to better account for oft-ignored issues of context and identity. Using linguistic ethnographic methods, it traces textual trajectories of key ideas indexed in a collective reflection event. Key findings include the nonlinearity of the reflective process and the centrality of identity-work in collective teacher reflection. This study thus reveals functions of this ritual that belie its ostensible purposes and suggest a rethinking of this practice.
AB - Collective reflection, which has become a de rigueur activity in teacher training and professional development, is predicated upon Schön’s theory of reflective practice. This concept, according to which people learn to be reflective-in-action through reflection on practice, relates primarily to individual and one-on-one mentorship processes. The shift from individual to collective processes has gone largely unstudied and unproblematized. This study of collective teacher reflection in a professional development workshop calls prevailing assumptions into question by bringing an alternative lens, textual trajectories, to bear on this ubiquitous activity to better account for oft-ignored issues of context and identity. Using linguistic ethnographic methods, it traces textual trajectories of key ideas indexed in a collective reflection event. Key findings include the nonlinearity of the reflective process and the centrality of identity-work in collective teacher reflection. This study thus reveals functions of this ritual that belie its ostensible purposes and suggest a rethinking of this practice.
KW - case study
KW - ethnography
KW - inservice education
KW - literacy/reading teacher education
KW - reflection
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85165604290&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1177/00224871231188702
DO - 10.1177/00224871231188702
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85165604290
SN - 0022-4871
VL - 75
SP - 155
EP - 167
JO - Journal of Teacher Education
JF - Journal of Teacher Education
IS - 2
ER -