Examining interactions between dominant discourses and engineering educational concepts in teachers' pedagogical reasoning

IF 3.9 2区 工程技术 Q1 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH Journal of Engineering Education Pub Date : 2023-11-13 DOI:10.1002/jee.20563
Natalie De Lucca, Jessica Watkins, Rebecca D. Swanson, Merredith Portsmore
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Abstract

Background

Engineering's introduction into K–12 classrooms has been purported to support meaningful and inclusive learning environments. However, teachers must contend with dominant discourses embedded in US schooling that justify inequitable distributions of resources.

Purpose

Drawing on Gee's notion of discourses, we examine how teachers incorporate language legitimizing socially and culturally constructed values and beliefs. In particular, we focus on the discourse of ability hierarchy—reflecting dominant values of sorting and ranking students based on perceived academic abilities—and the discourse of individual blame—reflecting dominant framings of educational problems as solely the responsibility of individual students or families. We aim to understand how these discourses surface in teachers' reasoning about teaching engineering.

Method

We interviewed 15 teachers enrolled in an online graduate program in engineering education. Utilizing critical discourse analysis, we analyzed how teachers drew on discourses of blame and ability hierarchy when reasoning about problems of practice in engineering.

Results

Teachers drew on engineering education concepts to reinforce dominant discourses (echoing specific language and preserving given roles) as well as to disrupt (utilizing different language or roles that [implicitly] challenge) dominant discourses. Importantly, teachers could also retool discourses of ability hierarchy (arguing for a more equitable distribution of resources but problematically preserving the values of ranking and sorting students).

Conclusions

K–12 schooling's sociohistorical context can shape how teachers make sense of engineering in ways that implicate race, gender, disability, and language, suggesting a need to grapple with how discourses from schooling—and engineering culture—maintain marginalizing environments for students.

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研究教师教学推理中的主流话语与工程教育理念之间的相互作用
背景 工程学被引入 K-12 年级的课堂,据称可以支持有意义的全纳学习环境。然而,教师必须与美国学校教育中的主流话语作斗争,这些话语为不公平的资源分配提供了理由。 目的 借鉴吉伊的话语概念,我们研究教师如何使用语言,使社会和文化构建的价值观和信念合法化。我们尤其关注能力等级话语--反映了根据学生的学业能力进行分类和排名的主流价值观,以及个人责任话语--反映了将教育问题完全归咎于学生个人或家庭的主流框架。我们旨在了解这些话语是如何在教师的工程学教学推理中体现出来的。 方法 我们采访了 15 名参加工程教育在线研究生课程的教师。通过批判性话语分析,我们分析了教师在推理工程实践问题时如何借鉴责任和能力等级话语。 结果 教师利用工程教育概念来强化主流话语(呼应特定的语言和维护既定的角色),以及破坏主流话语(利用不同的语言或角色[隐含地]挑战主流话语)。重要的是,教师还可以重新调整关于能力等级的论述(主张更公平地分配资源,但保留了对学生进行排名和分类的价值观,这是有问题的)。 结论 K-12 学校教育的社会历史背景可能会影响教师对工程学的理解,并牵涉到种族、性 别、残疾和语言等问题。
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来源期刊
Journal of Engineering Education
Journal of Engineering Education 工程技术-工程:综合
CiteScore
12.20
自引率
11.80%
发文量
47
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of Engineering Education (JEE) serves to cultivate, disseminate, and archive scholarly research in engineering education.
期刊最新文献
Issue Information Celebrating outstanding publications and reviewers from the 2023 volume Professorial intentions of engineering PhDs from historically excluded groups: The influence of graduate school experiences Through their eyes: Understanding institutional factors that impact the transfer processes of Black engineering students An exploration of psychological safety and conflict in first-year engineering student teams
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