{"title":"退而求进:实践共同体中的反思","authors":"C. Nordlund, Julia L. Hovanec","doi":"10.1080/00043125.2023.2167384","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Educators may craft 1,000 to 1,500 decisions a day, making teaching not a matter of prescribed steps but a mass of involvements and responses (Goldberg & Houser, 2017; Good & Brophy, 2008). Teaching is a complex collection of creative actions with ongoing consequential choices and decisions; therefore, it necessitates educators’ ongoing reflection. As educators who currently serve art teacher candidates at Kutztown University of Pennsylvania, a small public university in the rural Northeast serving a student population primarily identifying as state residents, we view ourselves, our preservice educators, and our pedagogy in a state of ceaselessly becoming (Nordlund, 2019; Unrath & Nordlund, 2009). As we constantly seek to rework ourselves and expand our lens on the world, we continuously think about how we might inculcate reflection as a habit of mind in our teacher candidates who are embarking on a lifetime of collaborative learning. We define reflective practice as a serious consideration or intentional thought focused on refining purposes and practices. Reflection is an act of seeking betterment. We consider great educators to be those who know why they do what they do (L. M. Danielson, 2009) because they have a good sense of when to step back and think deeply—a pause to reflect. Within the pandemic’s uncertainty and daily onslaught of the unforeseen, we noticed our teacher candidates finding it challenging to step back and reflect. The pandemic’s ever-changing mandates perpetuated flux in classrooms and art spaces and required greater attention and intention from educators. This climate was an opening for reflection as a means for sensemaking. Our teacher candidates’ reflections easily moved away from asset-based introspection (Bertling, 2019; Klein & Miraglia, 2017) to negative feelings such as regret and judgment. This facilitated the need to house and support their acts of reflection in a community of practice. Reflection in a Community of Practice","PeriodicalId":36828,"journal":{"name":"Art Education","volume":"76 1","pages":"8 - 14"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2023-05-04","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Stepping Back to Step Forward: Reflection in a Community of Practice\",\"authors\":\"C. Nordlund, Julia L. Hovanec\",\"doi\":\"10.1080/00043125.2023.2167384\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Educators may craft 1,000 to 1,500 decisions a day, making teaching not a matter of prescribed steps but a mass of involvements and responses (Goldberg & Houser, 2017; Good & Brophy, 2008). Teaching is a complex collection of creative actions with ongoing consequential choices and decisions; therefore, it necessitates educators’ ongoing reflection. As educators who currently serve art teacher candidates at Kutztown University of Pennsylvania, a small public university in the rural Northeast serving a student population primarily identifying as state residents, we view ourselves, our preservice educators, and our pedagogy in a state of ceaselessly becoming (Nordlund, 2019; Unrath & Nordlund, 2009). As we constantly seek to rework ourselves and expand our lens on the world, we continuously think about how we might inculcate reflection as a habit of mind in our teacher candidates who are embarking on a lifetime of collaborative learning. We define reflective practice as a serious consideration or intentional thought focused on refining purposes and practices. Reflection is an act of seeking betterment. We consider great educators to be those who know why they do what they do (L. M. Danielson, 2009) because they have a good sense of when to step back and think deeply—a pause to reflect. Within the pandemic’s uncertainty and daily onslaught of the unforeseen, we noticed our teacher candidates finding it challenging to step back and reflect. The pandemic’s ever-changing mandates perpetuated flux in classrooms and art spaces and required greater attention and intention from educators. This climate was an opening for reflection as a means for sensemaking. Our teacher candidates’ reflections easily moved away from asset-based introspection (Bertling, 2019; Klein & Miraglia, 2017) to negative feelings such as regret and judgment. This facilitated the need to house and support their acts of reflection in a community of practice. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
教育工作者每天可能会做出1000到1500个决定,使教学不是一个规定步骤的问题,而是一系列的参与和回应(Goldberg&Houser,2017;Good和Brophy,2008年)。教学是一个复杂的创造性行动的集合,具有不断的相应选择和决定;因此,它需要教育工作者不断反思。作为目前为宾夕法尼亚州库茨敦大学(Kutztown University of Pennsylvania)艺术教师候选人提供服务的教育工作者,我们认为自己、我们的职前教育工作者和我们的教育学正处于一种不断发展的状态(Nordlund,2019;Unrath和Nordrund,2009年)。当我们不断寻求重塑自己,扩大我们对世界的视野时,我们不断思考如何将反思作为一种思维习惯灌输给那些开始终身合作学习的教师候选人。我们将反思性实践定义为专注于提炼目的和实践的认真思考或有意思考。反思是一种寻求改善的行为。我们认为,伟大的教育工作者是那些知道自己为什么要做自己所做的事情的人(L.M.Danielson,2009),因为他们很清楚什么时候应该退后一步,深入思考——停下来反思。在疫情的不确定性和不可预见的日常冲击中,我们注意到我们的教师候选人发现退后一步反思很有挑战性。疫情不断变化的任务使课堂和艺术空间不断变化,需要教育工作者给予更多关注和关注。这种气候是一种反思的机会,也是一种制造感觉的手段。我们的教师候选人的反思很容易从基于资产的内省(Bertling,2019;Klein&Miraglia,2017)转移到后悔和判断等负面情绪。这有助于在实践社区中容纳和支持他们的反思行为。实践共同体中的反思
Stepping Back to Step Forward: Reflection in a Community of Practice
Educators may craft 1,000 to 1,500 decisions a day, making teaching not a matter of prescribed steps but a mass of involvements and responses (Goldberg & Houser, 2017; Good & Brophy, 2008). Teaching is a complex collection of creative actions with ongoing consequential choices and decisions; therefore, it necessitates educators’ ongoing reflection. As educators who currently serve art teacher candidates at Kutztown University of Pennsylvania, a small public university in the rural Northeast serving a student population primarily identifying as state residents, we view ourselves, our preservice educators, and our pedagogy in a state of ceaselessly becoming (Nordlund, 2019; Unrath & Nordlund, 2009). As we constantly seek to rework ourselves and expand our lens on the world, we continuously think about how we might inculcate reflection as a habit of mind in our teacher candidates who are embarking on a lifetime of collaborative learning. We define reflective practice as a serious consideration or intentional thought focused on refining purposes and practices. Reflection is an act of seeking betterment. We consider great educators to be those who know why they do what they do (L. M. Danielson, 2009) because they have a good sense of when to step back and think deeply—a pause to reflect. Within the pandemic’s uncertainty and daily onslaught of the unforeseen, we noticed our teacher candidates finding it challenging to step back and reflect. The pandemic’s ever-changing mandates perpetuated flux in classrooms and art spaces and required greater attention and intention from educators. This climate was an opening for reflection as a means for sensemaking. Our teacher candidates’ reflections easily moved away from asset-based introspection (Bertling, 2019; Klein & Miraglia, 2017) to negative feelings such as regret and judgment. This facilitated the need to house and support their acts of reflection in a community of practice. Reflection in a Community of Practice