TY - JOUR
T1 - Narrative teacher education pedagogies from across the pacific
AU - Howe, Edward
AU - Arimoto, Masahiro
PY - 2014/1/1
Y1 - 2014/1/1
N2 - Interest in narrative pedagogies is growing. However, few studies have been conducted outside Western contexts. There remains a paucity of narrative research published by Japanese scholars, despite a pervasive culture of "teacher to teacher conversations," storytelling, reflection, and action research by teachers in Japan. Thus, this research fills an important gap in the literature. It provides exemplars from preservice teacher education, higher education, and high school, as these educational milieus reflect the notion of "traveling stories" (Olson &Craig, 2009). We describe how this narrative pedagogy is interpreted from an insider's point of view, through the voices of teacher education students, teachers, and teacher educators. In this process, students and teachers become curriculum-makers (Clandinin &Connelly, 1988; Craig &Ross, 2008), co-constructing knowledge, and reshaping teacher knowledge and identity. Narrative teacher education pedagogies resonate with Japanese teachers and play an important role in curriculum, teaching, and learning in Japan within our increasingly interconnected world. Furthermore, narrative relates favorably to many Japanese cultural practices, including kankei (interrelationships), kizuna (bonds), and kizuki (with-it-ness). These are important, integral, and tacit elements of Japanese teachers' practices because they embody the "mind and heart" of their personal practical sense of knowing. Furthermore, these practices involve placing other people's needs ahead of our own-an essential skill for global citizens of the 21st century.
AB - Interest in narrative pedagogies is growing. However, few studies have been conducted outside Western contexts. There remains a paucity of narrative research published by Japanese scholars, despite a pervasive culture of "teacher to teacher conversations," storytelling, reflection, and action research by teachers in Japan. Thus, this research fills an important gap in the literature. It provides exemplars from preservice teacher education, higher education, and high school, as these educational milieus reflect the notion of "traveling stories" (Olson &Craig, 2009). We describe how this narrative pedagogy is interpreted from an insider's point of view, through the voices of teacher education students, teachers, and teacher educators. In this process, students and teachers become curriculum-makers (Clandinin &Connelly, 1988; Craig &Ross, 2008), co-constructing knowledge, and reshaping teacher knowledge and identity. Narrative teacher education pedagogies resonate with Japanese teachers and play an important role in curriculum, teaching, and learning in Japan within our increasingly interconnected world. Furthermore, narrative relates favorably to many Japanese cultural practices, including kankei (interrelationships), kizuna (bonds), and kizuki (with-it-ness). These are important, integral, and tacit elements of Japanese teachers' practices because they embody the "mind and heart" of their personal practical sense of knowing. Furthermore, these practices involve placing other people's needs ahead of our own-an essential skill for global citizens of the 21st century.
KW - Global citizenship education
KW - Japan
KW - Narrative inquiry
KW - Pedagogy
KW - Teacher education
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84915767074&partnerID=8YFLogxK
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U2 - 10.1108/S1479-368720140000022014
DO - 10.1108/S1479-368720140000022014
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84915767074
SN - 1479-3687
VL - 22
SP - 213
EP - 232
JO - Advances in Research on Teaching
JF - Advances in Research on Teaching
ER -