How do classroom teachers envision new technologies within their practice? In the conversation on incorporating new technologies into classrooms, teachers are often sidelined. Envisioning New Technologies in Teacher Practice looks at the complex ways in which teachers move forward to embrace change as well as how they circle back, continually revising their practices while subtly resisting change. In addition to examining how teacher identities change over time, the book also reveals how they can be changed. Co-authored by a university research team – four teachers, a principal and LWL’s pedagogical leader – the book discusses the professional development model that emerged and foregrounds how a teacher action research component contributed to teachers’ – and students’ – learning.
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Envisioning New Technologies in Teacher Practice
Contents: Teresa Strong-Wilson: Teachers, Change and New Technologies – Teresa Strong-Wilson/Bob Thomas: Turning Points in the Professional Development. Model and Methodology – Teresa Strong-Wilson/Dawn Rouse: New Wine in Old Bottles? Remediation, Teacher as Bricoleur, and the Story of Antaeus – Teresa Strong-Wilson/Amy L. Cole: A Room of One’s Own: Exploring the Relationship of Teacher Research to Integration of New Technologies – Teresa Strong-Wilson/Amy L. Cole: Conversation, Blogging and Teacher as Researcher: Building Collegiality and the Project’s Social Memory – Teresa Strong-Wilson/Amy L. Cole: The Teachers’ Case Studies – Teresa Strong-Wilson/Dina Tsoulos/Dawn Rouse: Sea Changes: Digital Storytelling, Turning Points, and Teacher Agency – Bob Thomas/Bonnie Mitchell/Manuela Pasinato/Kelly Ryan/Marie-Claude Tétrault/Penny Bonneville/Teresa Strong-Wilson: Postscript: Keeping the Lights On.
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781433108068
Publisert
2012
Utgiver
Vendor
Peter Lang Publishing Inc
Vekt
380 gr
Høyde
225 mm
Bredde
150 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet

Om bidragsyterne

Teresa Strong-Wilson is Associate Professor in the Faculty of Education at McGill University, Canada; research fellow in McGill’s Institute for the Public Life of Arts and Ideas (Memory and Echo, 2009-2012); and co-editor of the McGill Journal of Education. She is the author of Bringing Memory Forward: Storied Remembrance in Social Justice Education with Teachers (Lang, 2008) and co-editor of Memory and Pedagogy (Mitchell et al., 2011).