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1
The Culture Beyond the Content: Does an “Overcoming Testimony” Empower Effective Urban Mathematics Teachers to Reach their Students?
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2
Rethinking analogical reasoning: The power of stimuli and task framework in understanding biomedical science, technological advancements, and social interactions
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3
Reading Analyses with Chilean Children
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4
From Academic English to School Discourses: Reconceptualizing Academic Language
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5
The Association Between Parental Executive Function and Children’s Language Skills at 18 Months
McKee, Kelsey. - 2021
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6
Invisible Identities: The Selective Racialization of Iranian Students
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7
THE EXPERIENCES OF KOREAN IMMIGRANT PARENTS OF CHILDREN WITH SPECIAL NEEDS IN THE AMERICAN SPECIAL EDUCATION SYSTEM
Joo, Riah. - 2020
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8
De Facto Bilingual Education: The Role of Home Language Support in the Academic Achievement of Dual Language Learners
Guzman, Natalia. - 2020
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9
AN EVALUATION OF YOUTH MENTAL HEALTH FIRST AID TRAINING FOR AMERICORPS CLASSROOM EDUCATORS
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10
CROSS-LINGUISTIC DIFFERENCES IN THE LEARNING OF INFLECTIONAL MORPHOLOGY: EFFECTS OF TARGET LANGUAGE PARADIGM COMPLEXITY
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11
How Pre-K Teachers Support the Language and Literacy Development of Young Dual Language Learners: A Multi-Case Study of Four Exemplary Teachers
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12
"We just learned from each other": ESOL pre-service teachers learning to use digital tools across coursework and student teaching
Durham, Carmen. - 2020
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13
Bilingual in a Monolingual District: Stakeholder Perspectives on Equitable Access to Dual Language Programs
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14
I Think I Can, I Think I Can: Exploring Predictors of College Student Resilience & Hope
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15
Points of Learning Instead of States of Being: Reimagining the Role of Emotions in Teacher Development through Compassionate and Developmental Supports
Stump , Megan. - 2020
Abstract: The existing research on second-language (L2) teacher emotion presents emotional experiences as largely descriptive: we know what emotions L2 teachers feel, and how emotions impact L2 teachers and their pedagogy. However, current framing of emotion in L2 teaching does little to examine how L2 teachers navigate emotional experiences and how emotions factor into their learning and development process. I fill this gap in the literature by studying how L2 teacher preparation programs can support pre-service L2 teachers’ (L2 PSTs) expressed emotions and how this emotional support may impact L2 PSTs’ conceptions of their teaching and themselves as teachers. I approach this study from a sociocultural perspective which posits that the cognitive and emotional minds function as a dialectical unity and therefore, positions cognition and emotion as central to teacher development. Central to the findings for this study is a better understanding of how teacher educators support L2 PST emotion and what this support does for L2 PSTs. Specifically, I highlight two types of emotional support that teacher educators may provide to L2 PSTs: Compassionate Emotional Support (CES) and Developmental Emotional Support (DES). CES focuses specifically on emotions by encouraging L2 PSTs in successful and challenging times, normalizing their emotions, and providing multiple opportunities for them to share their emotions. Conversely, DES focuses on cognitive aspects of emotions by exploring alternative ways of thinking, doing, perceiving, and understanding L2 PSTs’ teaching. When L2 PSTs have a greater cognitive pool of options from which to orient themselves toward their teaching, they appear to be able to change their thinking, feelings, and activity related to their teaching. Essentially, L2 PSTs transform as a result of DES. My findings clearly indicate that emotions signify areas of significance to L2 PSTs and thus, are rich areas for exploration for learning. Teacher educators should focus on supporting cognitive understandings connected to expressed emotions to help foster L2 PST growth and development. When teacher educators approach emotions as being rooted in cognition, they are able to reimagine emotions as points of learning instead of states of being.
Keyword: Emotion; English as a second language; Pre-service second language teachers; Teacher education; Teacher Educators
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/1903/26019
https://doi.org/10.13016/zqnd-9qex
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16
AN ANALYSIS OF CODE SWITCHING EVENTS IN TYPICALLY DEVELOPING SPANISH-ENGLISH BILINGUAL CHILDREN
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17
EFFECTS OF DIFFERENT TYPES OF AUDITORY INPUT ON INCIDENTAL VOCABULARY LEARNING BY L2 JAPANESE SPEAKERS
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18
Exploring the Use of Cognitive Apprenticeship for Teachers and Students in Science Classrooms
Lee, Yewon. - 2019
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19
CULTURAL RESPONSIVENESS IN THE CONTEXT OF A LARGE URBAN SCHOOL DISTRICT: AN ANALYSIS OF MATH & ELA TEACHER PERCEPTIONS OF CULTURALLY RESPONSIVE PRACTICES IN TEACHING LATINA/O ELLs
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20
Environmental Advocacy Messages: Relationships Between the Messages that Constituents Send to Decision Makers and Organizational Engagement
Choy, David F. - 2019
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