TY - CHAP
T1 - Problematizing niceness
T2 - A teacher educators' learning community on culturally responsive teaching
AU - Reidel, Michelle
AU - Shannon-Baker, Peggy
AU - Toledo, Courtney Alexander
AU - Crawford, Kathleen M.
AU - Roberts, Leslie D.
AU - Huling, Heather M.
AU - Liston, Delores
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024, IGI Global. All rights reserved.
PY - 2023/11/13
Y1 - 2023/11/13
N2 - Culturally responsive teaching (CRT) advocates for "teaching to and through" cultural diversity to improve learning, build relationships, mediate classroom power imbalances, and challenge stereotypes and prejudices. Despite the plethora of research on CRT in the K-12 environment, there is a lack of research regarding how higher education faculty enact these practices. To address this disparity, an intentional learning community of teacher educators at a university in the US South conducted a self-study to identify areas in which they enact CRT. The authors used a qualitatively oriented, embedded mixed methods design using the culturally responsive teaching self-assessment tool (CRTA) and conversational interviews as data which were then descriptively and inductively analyzed, respectively. The analyses identified three major themes: (a) the impact of course delivery and content on the implementation of CRT, (b) the prevalence of niceness as an obstacle to CRT, and (c) the power of reflection for increased awareness and long-term change.
AB - Culturally responsive teaching (CRT) advocates for "teaching to and through" cultural diversity to improve learning, build relationships, mediate classroom power imbalances, and challenge stereotypes and prejudices. Despite the plethora of research on CRT in the K-12 environment, there is a lack of research regarding how higher education faculty enact these practices. To address this disparity, an intentional learning community of teacher educators at a university in the US South conducted a self-study to identify areas in which they enact CRT. The authors used a qualitatively oriented, embedded mixed methods design using the culturally responsive teaching self-assessment tool (CRTA) and conversational interviews as data which were then descriptively and inductively analyzed, respectively. The analyses identified three major themes: (a) the impact of course delivery and content on the implementation of CRT, (b) the prevalence of niceness as an obstacle to CRT, and (c) the power of reflection for increased awareness and long-term change.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85179631852&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.4018/978-1-6684-7270-5.ch014
DO - 10.4018/978-1-6684-7270-5.ch014
M3 - Chapter
AN - SCOPUS:85179631852
SN - 9781668472705
SP - 255
EP - 275
BT - Exploring Meaningful and Sustainable Intentional Learning Communities for P-20 Educators
PB - IGI Global
ER -