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| Readers
Becoming Teachers of Literature
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Jane
M. Agee
SUNY Albany |
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This
naturalistic case study focuses on 2 preservice students in a secondary
language arts program. I wanted to know how their histories as readers
and students of literature intersected with their secondary-school
literature course and how their developing stances on teaching literature
changed as they moved through their preservice teaching. Data collection
included field notes; audiotaped interviews; reading protocols; documents
such as syllabi, handouts, and assignments; preservice students’ portfolios,
logs, lesson plans, and tests; and videotapes of the participants
teaching literature during their preservice teaching. I made observations
of additional classes, and I collected teaching logs, lesson plans,
and other relevant artifacts. I used a constant-comparison analysis
to produce grounded theory about the preservice experience. The data
revealed two broad sources of knowledge that were important to the
participants’ entering perceptions on teaching literature: prior experiences
with literature and preexisting conceptions of the role of a teacher.
The ideas they brought with them were often in conflict with what
they encountered in the preservice course. Their cases illustrate
the impact of a secondary-literature course and preservice teaching
on participants’ ideas about teaching literature. |
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JLR
v.
29 no. 3
1997
pp. 397–431 |
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