Cross-Cultural Student Teaching: Examining the Meaning-Making of one White, Female, MiddleClass Preservice Teacher

Authors

  • Stephanie J. Shedrow University of Wisconsin-Madison, United States

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.32674/jis.v7i2.381

Keywords:

cross-cultural experiential learning, cultural mismatch, narrative inquiry, student teaching, whiteness theory

Abstract

While teacher educators implement diverse student teaching placements for preservice teachers as a means of bridging the cultural mismatch in classrooms around the United States, researchers have only recently begun to tap into the role that preservice teachers’ “whiteness” plays in their ideologies. As such, the purpose of this study was to better understand how one white, female preservice teacher made meaning of her experiences during a cross-cultural experiential learning (CCEL) student teaching placement abroad. Analyzing if and how previous intercultural interactions were drawn upon while abroad, as well as how experiences abroad were employed once returning to the US, findings suggest that cultural competency does not directly equate to recognizing whiteness and the privileges associated.

Author Biography

  • Stephanie J. Shedrow, University of Wisconsin-Madison, United States

    STEPHANIE J SHEDROW is a PhD candidate at the University of Wisconsin, Madison in the department of Curriculum and Instruction with foci in literacy, teacher education, educational policy and qualitative research. Her research interests include assessment practices and home/school connections. 

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Published

2017-04-01

Issue

Section

Research Articles (English)

How to Cite

Cross-Cultural Student Teaching: Examining the Meaning-Making of one White, Female, MiddleClass Preservice Teacher. (2017). Journal of International Students, 7(2), 270-290. https://doi.org/10.32674/jis.v7i2.381