Kaitlin T. Torphy, Sihua Hu, Yuqing Liu, Zixi Chen
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引用次数: 29
Abstract
There is growing evidence that educators engage in social media and virtual social networks across formal and informal settings to direct the trajectory of their curriculum. Interactions within and across virtual spaces provide opportunities to flatten hierarchical structures as teachers may directly or indirectly engage with educational decision making and reform implementation (e.g., Supovitz et al. 2015). This article examines an educational phenomenon, the emergence of a teacherpreneurial guild—that is, a teacher collective promoting professional practices, norms, and entrepreneurial activity—creating and defining knowledge underlying educational practices and classroom behaviors. Using a sample of Midwestern elementary teachers, this work identifies patterns of online educational resource access over 4 years across 135,000 pins shared within Pinterest, a social media platform. Results indicate teachers most often turn to one another for resources and professional materials. This may have implications for trust developed within teacherpreneurial guilds and teachers’ ability to exert agency within their profession.
越来越多的证据表明,教育工作者在正式和非正式的环境中参与社交媒体和虚拟社交网络,以指导他们的课程轨迹。虚拟空间内部和之间的互动提供了扁平化分层结构的机会,因为教师可以直接或间接地参与教育决策和改革实施(例如,Supovitz et al. 2015)。本文考察了一种教育现象,即教师创业协会的出现——即一个教师集体,促进专业实践、规范和创业活动——创造和定义教育实践和课堂行为背后的知识。本研究以中西部小学教师为样本,通过社交媒体平台Pinterest上共享的13.5万个pins,确定了4年来在线教育资源访问的模式。调查结果显示,教师们最常向彼此寻求资源和专业材料。这可能对教师创业协会内部发展的信任和教师在其职业中发挥代理作用的能力产生影响。
期刊介绍:
Founded as School Review in 1893, the American Journal of Education acquired its present name in November 1979. The Journal seeks to bridge and integrate the intellectual, methodological, and substantive diversity of educational scholarship, and to encourage a vigorous dialogue between educational scholars and practitioners. To achieve that goal, papers are published that present research, theoretical statements, philosophical arguments, critical syntheses of a field of educational inquiry, and integrations of educational scholarship, policy, and practice.