Reflexive Identities: Interrogating the Social Genesis of Teacher Educator Subjectivities in Late Modernity
Reflexive
Identities: Interrogating the Social Genesis of Teacher Educator Subjectivities
in Late Modernity
Anthony Joseph
Research Scholar
Dept. of Education – CIE, DU
Delhi
|
Poonam
Barla
Research
Scholar
Faculty
of Education – BHU
Varanasi
|
Extended
Abstract
(For, 9th
International Conference, 2018 of Comparative Education Society of India (CESI) on 'Modernity,
Transformative Social Identities and Education in Comparative Contexts'
from 14-16 December, 2018)
Education
plays a major social function in society. Bequeathing to our children and posterity an education
that is centred on social justice and human welfare, particularly in times of
rapid economic and social change – is easily the central concern of
government officials, social innovation practitioners, social entrepreneurs,
civil society organizations, as well as students who would like to contribute
to the common social good. The implicit role of teachers to address this
concern assumes the role of teacher educators to promote a dynamic vision of
teaching and build bridges between the academic world and political and social
decision-makers. This paper argues that such an implicit assumption fails to
adequately problematise the social genesis of teacher educator subjectivities
in late modernity and thus the central concern of ‘LEARNING to Realize Education's
Promise’ (World Development Report, 2018) remains a mere wish.
Ways
of being and becoming in teaching requires of teachers to engage with ways to
strengthen and sustain self, soul, heart, identity, and leverage these key
touchstones to strengthen teaching and learning. While making sense of their
teaching lives and teaching selves, teachers live in an ever-changing social
world, which constantly demands adjustment to their identities and actions.
With the shattering of the mirror of class consciousness, modern subjects
conceive of themselves as reflexive, rational individuals, as indeed they must
in order to survive the insecurity created by the structural fragmentation that
Beck’s metaphor below makes explicit.
The
emergence of reflexivity goes hand in hand with a decline in sources of meaning
which situate the subject within a collective. One of the driving forces behind
this is the fragmentation of the industrial class structure and the resulting
changes in the sources of identity available to subjects in late modernity:
To express this
metaphysically, one could say that the concave mirror of class consciousness
shatters without disintegrating, and that each fragment produces its own total
perspective, although the mirror’s surface with its myriad of tiny cracks and
fissures is unable to produce a unified image. As people are removed from
social ties and privatized through recurrent surges of individualization, a
double effect occurs. On the one hand, forms of perception become private, and
at the same time - conceiving of this along the time axis - they become
ahistorical. (Beck 1992, pp. 134–135)
The
structural fragmentation challenges teacher educators to undertake the
rigourous work of discovering who they are as human beings and how this impacts
who they are with their students. Such a discovery calls for a critical
interrogation of the social genesis of their subjectivities particularly in
late modernity. Reflexive pedagogical practice, inherent in this interrogation,
looks at the ‘identity undoing’ that such practice demands from teacher
educators. Such identity undoing, the paper will discuss, is found to have
strong connections to the impact on identity of power relations, resistance and
struggle.
Reflexivity,
which sets of reflexive pedagogical practice, is a core concept within the
sociological theory of Anthony Giddens (1991), together with Ulrick Beck and
Scott Lash brought the term its most prominence, is seen as the capacity of
people to be both subjects and objects to themselves (Weigert and Grecas,
2003:280).
Reflexivity
is viewed as a two-pronged understanding of the role of the researcher, both as
someone who possesses knowledge and as someone pursuing knowledge (May, 2002).
We contend that this understanding of reflexivity is also well suited for the
practice of teaching, and specifically well suited for the practice of teacher
education. Evidently, among teacher educators there been an increased awareness
and call to use reflexive methodology particularly with
post-structuralist
critiques of qualitative methods that made explicit the need for researchers to
situate themselves within their data (Brewer, 2005). Teaching and learning transforms Teacher
Educators to research practitioners. Positioned
as instructors, they situate themselves within their data and are required both
to demonstrate a way of knowing and seek to learn from their students about
their social world and the potential application of their sociological knowledge
beyond the university, namely the larger society.
Societies are defined and managed through
discourses which constitute the social terrain on which subjectivities are
constructed and practiced. The interactions between and among dominant
discourses, structural and institutional processes, and lived subjectivities
make up the complex web of power relationships that make up late modernity
(Farrugia, 2015). This paper discusses a wide variety of critical issues that
have a direct role in the social genesis of teacher educator subjectivities in
late modernity. These include questions about the character of contemporary
societies, the periodisation of social change, the processes of change by which
societies are constantly made and remade by people, the relationships between
the 'social' and the 'natural', the formation and maintenance of identities and
matters of epistemology and methodology in pedagogy.
Theoretically, the paper approaches teacher
educator’s reflexive identities as a manifestation of late modern material
inequality, and sketches a theoretical framework which accounts for the
relationship between these inequalities and the subjectivities available to
teacher educators in late modernity.
Plotting
the possibilities and challenges, the paper explores how the individual
constructs a self from the thousands of colloquial identities provided by a
society’s culture, and reveals how the individual actualizes and sustains an
integrated and stable self while navigating the sometimes treacherous waters of
everyday institutional life.
Current
discordant discourses on all too familiar - disengaged students,
disenfranchised teachers, sanitized and irrelevant curricula, inadequate
support for the neediest schools and students, and the tyranny of standardizing
testing have ignored the social genesis of teacher educator subjectivities in
late modernity. The ‘becoming’ of a
teacher educator, an important dimension in a dynamic and ever-changing
educational landscape in late modernity, hardly merits mention in the policy
documents related to Teacher Education, nor how embracing a pedagogy in which emergence and becoming are central
aspects– raises uncomfortable power and identity issues for teacher educators.
Such an omission ignores questions related to, how do teacher educators weave
personal and professional identities to model teaching practices to support
continued resistance and possibilities in teacher education.
Exploring
the curricular landscape of teacher educator identity, the paper aims to raise
awareness of the inextricability of teaching and learning selves and the
subjects with whom and which they engage, this paper argues that such an
exploration entails a critical interrogation of the social genesis of teacher
educator subjectivities in late modernity. By exploring identity at this
intersection, the paper invites scholars and practitioners to reconceptualize
relationships with students, curriculum, and their varied contexts. Our hope is
to encourage authenticity, consciousness, and criticality that will foster more
liberating ways of teaching and learning.
Teacher
educators, through this paper are invited, to envision a social genesis a
shifting of power away from government control and standardization and one
pointed towards empowering teacher educators to guide and further develop the
unique talents of diverse individuals. A Critical and sustained engagement with
reflexive identities, the paper advocates, enables teacher educators with a new
and generative approach to the introduction of critical literacies and
pedagogies and offers a potentially powerful way to explore theory,
methodology, and social issues.
Key
Words: reflexive
identities, social genesis, teacher educator subjectivities, late modernity
Labels: late modernity, reflexive identities, Reflexive Pedagogy, Social Genesis, teacher educator subjectivities
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