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| Lifetime
Influences on the Literacy-Related Instructional Beliefs of Experienced
High School History Teachers: Two Comparative Case Studies
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Elizabeth
G.
Sturtevant
George Mason
University |
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This
paper presents and compares case studies of the literacy-related instructional
beliefs of two high school history teachers who had been teaching
for over 20 years in the same urban, highly multicultural high school
in the eastern United States. Data were collected through extended
autobiographical interviews with teachers, 20 sequential days of classroom
observation, classroom and district documents, and shorter interviews
with students and supervisors. The teachers’ beliefs about including
literacy-related activities in their instruction are described, and
past and recent influences on these beliefs are analyzed and compared.
Results include that the teachers’ beliefs were strongly affected
by personal relationships with trusted school colleagues, other teacher-friends,
early role models, and students. Implications for teacher development
programs and research are suggested. |
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JLR
v.
28 no. 2
1996
pp. 227–257 |
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