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Narratives, choices, alienation, and identity: learning from an elementary science teacher

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Abstract

As we contemplate on teacher identity research, there is a need to place a teacher’s narratives or story-lines at the center of that work. In this forum, in response to the insightful commentary from Stephen Ritchie and Maria Iñez Mafra Goulart and Eduardo Soares, I place a greater emphasis on understanding Daisy’s narratives from an existing social identity framework. Narratives tell us intricate and complex actions that a teacher has taken both personally and professionally. Additionally, narratives help us see implicit nature of identity explicitly. Therefore, a greater focus has to be placed on interactions and utterances of a teacher to make sense of who they are and what they do as expressed by their own words (identity and action). Finally, I join with Ritchie and Goulart and Soares to advocate that identity research needs to include participants as co-researchers and co-authors as identities are very personal and complex to be fully understood by the outsiders (researchers).

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Correspondence to Bhaskar Upadhyay.

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Upadhyay, B. Narratives, choices, alienation, and identity: learning from an elementary science teacher. Cult Stud of Sci Educ 4, 601–610 (2009). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11422-008-9169-y

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