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American Educational Research Journal
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Section on Teaching, Learning, and Human Development

A Visibility Project: Learning to See How Preservice Teachers Take Up Culturally Responsive Pedagogy

Anne Ruggles Gere

University of Michigan

Jennifer Buehler

Saint Louis University

Christian Dallavis

University of Notre Dame

Victoria Shaw Haviland

University of Michigan

This study analyzes the ways in which raced consciousness inflects developing understandings of cultural responsiveness among preservice teachers whose preparation included responses to imaginative engagement with literary texts, interactions in an underresourced school, and exploration of key concepts of culturally responsive pedagogy. The authors analyze how this preparation created spaces that made the diverse and complex understandings of cultural responsiveness held by teacher candidates and instructors visible and how raced consciousness shaped these understandings. Findings suggest that incorporation of multicultural literary texts, continual interrogation of attitudes toward race and racism, and explicit engagement with raced consciousness fosters learning about how beginning teachers take up cultural responsiveness, given the persistent stereotypes and the raced consciousness that shape their language and perceptions.

Key Words: racial identity • teacher education • teacher development • discourse processes • case studies

This version was published on September 1, 2009

American Educational Research Journal, Vol. 46, No. 3, 816-852 (2009)
DOI: 10.3102/0002831209333182


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