{"title":"泰国应急远程教学中TESOL教师的专业认同建构","authors":"Junifer L. Bucol, M. Ulla","doi":"10.18823/asiatefl.2022.19.3.14.997","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Previous studies on teachers. professional identity (TPI) (Arvaja, 2016;Kayi-Aydar, 2019b;Pennington & Richards, 2016;Wolff & De Costa, 2017) have acknowledged that TPI is deeply rooted in teachers. interaction and engagement in various socio-cultural contexts, which may impact teachers. professional selves. For example, teachers. professional identity may have been constructed early on in their careers, especially during their pre-service years. It may have been further developed as teachers entered the teaching profession as in-service teachers, where they may be exposed to different professional learning networks and various classroom pedagogies. It may also have been influenced by their engagement in research and publication, teacher-training, and other professional development programs afforded by the schools and other professional organizations. The current educational context, which is greatly affected by the COVID19 pandemic, has challenged TPI since most education institutions in the world migrated from face-to-face classroom teaching to online or emergency remote teaching to continue the teaching and learning process. Although the concept of online teaching is different from emergency remote teaching in that the former may involve substantive preparation from technical to pedagogical, while the latter \"is a temporary and abrupt shift to instructional delivery due to crises such as weather, war, or health\" (Moser et al., 2021, p. 2), migrating to emergency remote teaching, especially in the middle of the semester or academic year, entails a number of challenges that teachers may encounter. For instance, teachers may not be prepared for the new teaching and learning environment since they may not have the pedagogical skills to deliver their lessons in a remote/online setting (Konig et al., 2020). Teachers may not have prior training on conducting classes virtually or remotely since most of the training they received may only concentrate on pedagogies inside the classroom. Moreover, this unprecedented shift to emergency remote teaching may also mean that teachers have to develop new teaching materials, employ new teaching strategies, and adapt to the new teaching environment to conform to the new teaching environment. While teachers take advantage of the new teaching opportunities outside of the traditional classroom, they may also have to reflect on and consider their agency and self-efficacy in carrying the pedagogical tasks in a new social setting. Considering that a number of teachers may have been trained only in classroom pedagogies, teachers may need to reexamine their professional identity and identify whether they can cope with the needs of the \"new normal\" in education, particularly in language teaching. In other words, how teachers view their professional role in emergency remote teaching during health emergencies may impact their agency and self-efficacy towards online pedagogy. In the field of TESOL and language education, there has been a growing interest in language teacher professional identity (LTPI) since it \"could afford preservice and practicing language teachers a space to assert their agency in creating the contours of their identity formation\" (Lindahl & Yazan, 2019, p. 1). Language teachers position themselves as focal persons who can make an impact on their language learners. beliefs and attitudes towards learning the target language. Therefore, language teachers should recognize the intricacies of their professional identities (Kayi-Aydar, 2019a) since how they view and demonstrate their professional identities may affect their classroom pedagogies and their language learners. Using the concept of teacher.s professional identity (Skott, 2019), this study aims to contribute to the ongoing discussion on language teacher.s professional identity by exploring how language teachers in a university in Thailand view and construct their professional identities in emergency remote language teaching during the COVID19 pandemic. It is argued that within the context of online language teaching, TPI also plays an important concept that needs to be understood, especially from the perspectives of the language teachers who shifted from face-to-face classroom teaching to remote teaching in the middle of the semester due to the COVID19 pandemic.","PeriodicalId":51808,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Asia TEFL","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.4000,"publicationDate":"2022-09-30","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"TESOL Teachers’ Professional Identity Construction in Emergency Remote Teaching in Thailand\",\"authors\":\"Junifer L. Bucol, M. Ulla\",\"doi\":\"10.18823/asiatefl.2022.19.3.14.997\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Previous studies on teachers. professional identity (TPI) (Arvaja, 2016;Kayi-Aydar, 2019b;Pennington & Richards, 2016;Wolff & De Costa, 2017) have acknowledged that TPI is deeply rooted in teachers. interaction and engagement in various socio-cultural contexts, which may impact teachers. professional selves. For example, teachers. professional identity may have been constructed early on in their careers, especially during their pre-service years. It may have been further developed as teachers entered the teaching profession as in-service teachers, where they may be exposed to different professional learning networks and various classroom pedagogies. It may also have been influenced by their engagement in research and publication, teacher-training, and other professional development programs afforded by the schools and other professional organizations. The current educational context, which is greatly affected by the COVID19 pandemic, has challenged TPI since most education institutions in the world migrated from face-to-face classroom teaching to online or emergency remote teaching to continue the teaching and learning process. Although the concept of online teaching is different from emergency remote teaching in that the former may involve substantive preparation from technical to pedagogical, while the latter \\\"is a temporary and abrupt shift to instructional delivery due to crises such as weather, war, or health\\\" (Moser et al., 2021, p. 2), migrating to emergency remote teaching, especially in the middle of the semester or academic year, entails a number of challenges that teachers may encounter. For instance, teachers may not be prepared for the new teaching and learning environment since they may not have the pedagogical skills to deliver their lessons in a remote/online setting (Konig et al., 2020). Teachers may not have prior training on conducting classes virtually or remotely since most of the training they received may only concentrate on pedagogies inside the classroom. Moreover, this unprecedented shift to emergency remote teaching may also mean that teachers have to develop new teaching materials, employ new teaching strategies, and adapt to the new teaching environment to conform to the new teaching environment. While teachers take advantage of the new teaching opportunities outside of the traditional classroom, they may also have to reflect on and consider their agency and self-efficacy in carrying the pedagogical tasks in a new social setting. Considering that a number of teachers may have been trained only in classroom pedagogies, teachers may need to reexamine their professional identity and identify whether they can cope with the needs of the \\\"new normal\\\" in education, particularly in language teaching. In other words, how teachers view their professional role in emergency remote teaching during health emergencies may impact their agency and self-efficacy towards online pedagogy. In the field of TESOL and language education, there has been a growing interest in language teacher professional identity (LTPI) since it \\\"could afford preservice and practicing language teachers a space to assert their agency in creating the contours of their identity formation\\\" (Lindahl & Yazan, 2019, p. 1). Language teachers position themselves as focal persons who can make an impact on their language learners. beliefs and attitudes towards learning the target language. Therefore, language teachers should recognize the intricacies of their professional identities (Kayi-Aydar, 2019a) since how they view and demonstrate their professional identities may affect their classroom pedagogies and their language learners. Using the concept of teacher.s professional identity (Skott, 2019), this study aims to contribute to the ongoing discussion on language teacher.s professional identity by exploring how language teachers in a university in Thailand view and construct their professional identities in emergency remote language teaching during the COVID19 pandemic. It is argued that within the context of online language teaching, TPI also plays an important concept that needs to be understood, especially from the perspectives of the language teachers who shifted from face-to-face classroom teaching to remote teaching in the middle of the semester due to the COVID19 pandemic.\",\"PeriodicalId\":51808,\"journal\":{\"name\":\"Journal of Asia TEFL\",\"volume\":null,\"pages\":null},\"PeriodicalIF\":0.4000,\"publicationDate\":\"2022-09-30\",\"publicationTypes\":\"Journal Article\",\"fieldsOfStudy\":null,\"isOpenAccess\":false,\"openAccessPdf\":\"\",\"citationCount\":\"0\",\"resultStr\":null,\"platform\":\"Semanticscholar\",\"paperid\":null,\"PeriodicalName\":\"Journal of Asia TEFL\",\"FirstCategoryId\":\"1085\",\"ListUrlMain\":\"https://doi.org/10.18823/asiatefl.2022.19.3.14.997\",\"RegionNum\":0,\"RegionCategory\":null,\"ArticlePicture\":[],\"TitleCN\":null,\"AbstractTextCN\":null,\"PMCID\":null,\"EPubDate\":\"\",\"PubModel\":\"\",\"JCR\":\"Q4\",\"JCRName\":\"EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH\",\"Score\":null,\"Total\":0}","platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of Asia TEFL","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.18823/asiatefl.2022.19.3.14.997","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q4","JCRName":"EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
摘要
以前对教师的研究。职业认同(TPI)(Arvaja,2016;Kayi Aydar,2019b;Pennington和Richards,2016;Wolff和De Costa,2017)已经承认,TPI深深植根于教师。在各种社会文化背景下的互动和参与,这可能会影响教师。职业自我。例如,教师。职业身份可能在他们职业生涯的早期就已经形成,尤其是在他们任职前的几年。随着教师以在职教师的身份进入教师行业,他们可能会接触到不同的专业学习网络和各种课堂教学法,这一点可能得到了进一步发展。这也可能受到他们参与研究和出版、教师培训以及学校和其他专业组织提供的其他专业发展计划的影响。当前的教育环境受到新冠肺炎疫情的严重影响,对TPI提出了挑战,因为世界上大多数教育机构都从面对面课堂教学转向了在线或紧急远程教学,以继续教学过程。尽管在线教学的概念与紧急远程教学的不同之处在于,前者可能涉及从技术到教学的实质性准备,而后者“是由于天气、战争或健康等危机而暂时而突然地转向教学”(Moser et al.,2021,第2页),迁移到紧急远程教学,尤其是在学期或学年的中期,教师可能会遇到许多挑战。例如,教师可能没有为新的教学环境做好准备,因为他们可能不具备在远程/在线环境中授课的教学技能(Konig等人,2020)。教师可能事先没有接受过虚拟或远程授课的培训,因为他们接受的大多数培训可能只集中在课堂内的教学上。此外,这种前所未有的向紧急远程教学的转变也可能意味着教师必须开发新的教材,采用新的教学策略,适应新的教学环境,以适应新的教育环境。当教师利用传统课堂之外的新教学机会时,他们可能也必须反思和考虑自己在新的社会环境中承担教学任务的能动性和自我效能。考虑到一些教师可能只接受过课堂教学方面的培训,教师可能需要重新审视他们的职业身份,并确定他们是否能够满足教育“新常态”的需求,特别是在语言教学方面。换言之,教师在突发卫生事件期间如何看待他们在紧急远程教学中的专业角色,可能会影响他们对在线教学的能动性和自我效能。在TESOL和语言教育领域,人们对语言教师职业身份(LTPI)越来越感兴趣,因为它“可以为职前和实习语言教师提供一个空间,让他们在创造身份形成轮廓时发挥自己的作用”(Lindahl&Yazan,2019,第1页)。语言教师将自己定位为能够对语言学习者产生影响的焦点人物。学习目标语言的信念和态度。因此,语言教师应该认识到他们职业身份的复杂性(Kayi Aydar,2019a),因为他们如何看待和展示自己的职业身份可能会影响他们的课堂教学和语言学习者。利用教师职业身份的概念(Skott,2019),本研究旨在通过探索泰国一所大学的语言教师在新冠肺炎疫情期间如何看待和构建他们在紧急远程语言教学中的职业身份,为正在进行的语言教师职业身份讨论做出贡献。有人认为,在在线语言教学的背景下,TPI也扮演着一个需要理解的重要概念,特别是从由于COVID19大流行而在学期中期从面对面课堂教学转向远程教学的语言教师的角度来看。
TESOL Teachers’ Professional Identity Construction in Emergency Remote Teaching in Thailand
Previous studies on teachers. professional identity (TPI) (Arvaja, 2016;Kayi-Aydar, 2019b;Pennington & Richards, 2016;Wolff & De Costa, 2017) have acknowledged that TPI is deeply rooted in teachers. interaction and engagement in various socio-cultural contexts, which may impact teachers. professional selves. For example, teachers. professional identity may have been constructed early on in their careers, especially during their pre-service years. It may have been further developed as teachers entered the teaching profession as in-service teachers, where they may be exposed to different professional learning networks and various classroom pedagogies. It may also have been influenced by their engagement in research and publication, teacher-training, and other professional development programs afforded by the schools and other professional organizations. The current educational context, which is greatly affected by the COVID19 pandemic, has challenged TPI since most education institutions in the world migrated from face-to-face classroom teaching to online or emergency remote teaching to continue the teaching and learning process. Although the concept of online teaching is different from emergency remote teaching in that the former may involve substantive preparation from technical to pedagogical, while the latter "is a temporary and abrupt shift to instructional delivery due to crises such as weather, war, or health" (Moser et al., 2021, p. 2), migrating to emergency remote teaching, especially in the middle of the semester or academic year, entails a number of challenges that teachers may encounter. For instance, teachers may not be prepared for the new teaching and learning environment since they may not have the pedagogical skills to deliver their lessons in a remote/online setting (Konig et al., 2020). Teachers may not have prior training on conducting classes virtually or remotely since most of the training they received may only concentrate on pedagogies inside the classroom. Moreover, this unprecedented shift to emergency remote teaching may also mean that teachers have to develop new teaching materials, employ new teaching strategies, and adapt to the new teaching environment to conform to the new teaching environment. While teachers take advantage of the new teaching opportunities outside of the traditional classroom, they may also have to reflect on and consider their agency and self-efficacy in carrying the pedagogical tasks in a new social setting. Considering that a number of teachers may have been trained only in classroom pedagogies, teachers may need to reexamine their professional identity and identify whether they can cope with the needs of the "new normal" in education, particularly in language teaching. In other words, how teachers view their professional role in emergency remote teaching during health emergencies may impact their agency and self-efficacy towards online pedagogy. In the field of TESOL and language education, there has been a growing interest in language teacher professional identity (LTPI) since it "could afford preservice and practicing language teachers a space to assert their agency in creating the contours of their identity formation" (Lindahl & Yazan, 2019, p. 1). Language teachers position themselves as focal persons who can make an impact on their language learners. beliefs and attitudes towards learning the target language. Therefore, language teachers should recognize the intricacies of their professional identities (Kayi-Aydar, 2019a) since how they view and demonstrate their professional identities may affect their classroom pedagogies and their language learners. Using the concept of teacher.s professional identity (Skott, 2019), this study aims to contribute to the ongoing discussion on language teacher.s professional identity by exploring how language teachers in a university in Thailand view and construct their professional identities in emergency remote language teaching during the COVID19 pandemic. It is argued that within the context of online language teaching, TPI also plays an important concept that needs to be understood, especially from the perspectives of the language teachers who shifted from face-to-face classroom teaching to remote teaching in the middle of the semester due to the COVID19 pandemic.