Teachers’ Self-Censorship of Children’s Literature in Texas—What’s Legislation Got to Do With It?

IF 3.5 3区 教育学 Q1 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH
Catherine Lammert, Vickie C. Godfrey
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Although children’s literature has been challenged and banned for decades, some U.S. states have recently enacted legislation limiting how teachers can address such topics as race, sex, and gender in classrooms, which may influence teachers’ selection of literature. To understand this phenomenon, this exploratory concurrent mixed-methods study involved a written children’s literature course artifact and survey responses analyzed through critical literacy and self-censorship frameworks. Findings indicate that preservice teachers reported avoiding conversations about gender and gender identity more often than those about sexual orientation or race. Further, despite legislative changes, participants mostly reported self-censoring due to lack of pedagogical knowledge, lack of policy knowledge, and fear of institutional sanctions, which are long-standing reasons for self-censorship rather than new ones. Comparatively, they self-reported little desire to promote the dominant political ideology. This research indicates that topic-restrictive legislation can influence classroom practice even when teachers do not share the ideology behind such legislation.
得克萨斯州教师对儿童文学的自我审查——立法与之有何关系?
尽管儿童文学几十年来一直受到质疑和禁止,但美国一些州最近颁布了立法,限制教师在课堂上谈论种族、性别和社会性别等话题,这可能会影响教师对文学的选择。为了理解这一现象,本探索性并行混合方法研究涉及书面儿童文学课程工件和通过批判性读写和自我审查框架分析的调查反馈。研究结果表明,职前教师报告说,与性取向或种族相比,他们更避免谈论性别和性别认同。此外,尽管立法发生了变化,但参与者大多报告说,由于缺乏教学知识、缺乏政策知识和害怕机构制裁,这些都是自我审查的长期原因,而不是新的原因。相比之下,他们自我报告说,他们不太希望推动主流政治意识形态。本研究表明,即使教师不认同这种立法背后的意识形态,主题限制立法也会影响课堂实践。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Aera Open
Aera Open EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH-
CiteScore
5.00
自引率
7.10%
发文量
60
审稿时长
15 weeks
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