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    A Personal Transformative Journey in Co-Teaching for Revealing Teaching Identity

    174746_174746.pdf (132.7Kb)
    Access Status
    Open access
    Authors
    Rahmawati, Yuli
    Taylor, Peter
    Koul, Rekha
    Date
    2011
    Type
    Conference Paper
    
    Metadata
    Show full item record
    Citation
    Rahmawati, Yuli and Taylor, Peter C. and Koul, Rekha. 2011. A Personal Transformative Journey in Co-Teaching for Revealing Teaching Identity, in Jan Wright (ed), Proceedings of the AARE Conference, Nov 27 - Dec 1 2011. Hobart, Tas.: Australian Association for Research in Education.
    Source Title
    AARE 2011 Conference Proceedings
    Source Conference
    AARE Conference 2011
    Additional URLs
    http://www.aare.edu.au/data/publications/2011/aarefinal00519.pdf
    ISSN
    13249320
    School
    Science and Mathematics Education Centre (Research Institute)
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/36367
    Collection
    • Curtin Research Publications
    Abstract

    This paper focuses on critical reflections on my teaching identity when I engaged as a co- teacher with three science teachers and their students from different social and cultural backgrounds. I am a university based science teacher educator from Indonesia and an Australian doctoral student who is working in a 3-year longitudinal co-teaching project in lower secondary schools in Western Australia. As the research involved critical reflection on my own professional praxis, I adopted a multi-paradigmatic research approach with critical auto/ethnography as the research methodology. Over time, critical reflection enabled me to develop difference awareness, empathy and rapport, sharing of control and power, mutual understanding and negotiation. However, I found myself struggling to engage deeply with the science teachers and their students, due in part to socio-cultural factors. In this paper I investigate my autobiographical self as a science teacher educator facing the dilemma of aspiring to become increasingly empowered whilst simultaneously being controlled by external socio-cultural forces. As I worked with the 3 science teachers I found within their characters a mirror of my own history as a science teacher. I came to realise the power of meaning making for students' learning and also that in my own teaching history I had ignored it when the power of the technical interest strongly controlled the science classroom. The journey of working closely with the three science teachers invoked in me continuous reflection on my own evolving teaching identity as a science educator who is committed to transformative learning theory, who has faith in constructivism as a pedagogical referent, who envisions better teacher-student relationships, and who is trying to establish the wisdom of dialectical thinking; a set of beliefs that I hope will help me to stay on the pathway of increasing empowerment when I return to professional practice in my home country.

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