“没有动力但沮丧”:在非洲背景下保护教师的职业选择动机和职业认同

A. Obiagu
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本研究采用叙事研究方法,在非洲尼日利亚考察了职前教师的职业选择动机和职业认同。它借鉴了尼日利亚一所大学37名社会教育职前教师的故事,讲述了他们的教师成长轨迹和实现目标的教学实践经验。研究结果表明,在尼日利亚,教学选择受到后备高等教育项目、外在和社会化影响因素的高度激励,而内在、感知能力和利他主义因素是最不受激励的因素。尼日利亚的教学选择受到性别的影响,妇女的社会文化地位和传统性别角色影响了她们的教学选择和继续从事教师职业的意愿。绝大多数职前教师(83.78%)的教学职业认同较差且消极。此外,内在和利他主义动机因素与尼日利亚积极的教师职业认同有关。职前教师的职业认同源于社会影响、内在视角、教师教育经历以及教师福利和发展政策等制度因素。这些发现为社会教育教师的教育和道德培训需求提供了见解,可以利用教师代理来应对尼日利亚教育行业面临的结构性挑战,培养职前教师对教学的浓厚兴趣,并可能减少发展中环境中的教师流失。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
"Not motivated but frustrated": Preservice Teachers’ Career Choice Motivations and Professional Identity in an African Context
This study examines preservice teachers’ career choice motivations and professional identity in an African context, Nigeria, using a narrative research method. It draws on the stories of 37 social education preservice teachers at a university in Nigeria about their teacher-becoming trajectory and teaching practice experience to realize its aims. Findings show that in Nigeria, the choice of teaching is highly motivated by fallback higher education programs, extrinsic, and socialization influence factors, while intrinsic, perceived abilities, and altruistic factors are the least motivators. The choice of teaching is influenced by gender in Nigeria, with women’s sociocultural status and traditional gender roles influencing their choice of teaching and intention to remain in the teaching profession. The majority of the preservice teachers (83.78%) have poor and negative teaching professional identities. Also, intrinsic and altruistic motivation factors are associated with positive teacher professional identity in Nigeria. Pre-service teachers’ professional identity develops from social influences, intrinsic perspectives, and their teacher education experiences and institutional factors such as teacher welfare and development policies. The findings provide insights into social education teacher pedagogic and ethics training needs that could, drawing on teacher agency to navigate the structural challenges confronting the education profession in Nigeria, foster preservice teachers’ strong interest in teaching and possibly reduce teacher attrition in developing contexts.
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