A Longitudinal Study of EFL Teacher Agency and Sustainable Identity Development: A Positioning Theory Perspective
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. A Brief Overview of Research on Agency and Its Relationship with Identity
3. Positioning Theory
4. Methodology
4.1. Participant and Setting
4.2. Data Collection
4.3. Data Analysis
5. Results
5.1. Negotiating Exploited and Marginalised Teacher Identities
I was given more and more work by the school during the first few years of my work. The school had just established the business English department and thus had to teach many new courses accordingly. However, many teachers did not want to teach new lessons because it would take them more time to prepare a new lesson than the ones they had previously taught. Under such circumstance, I was asked to teach several of the new courses due to some business English background in my Master’s degree education. I thus had to teach three or more new courses, about 20 to 30 hours a week. And this took me a large amount of time for preparing the lessons and left me with very limited or even no time doing research and writing articles. I was like a “teaching machine”.
I was also asked to do much trivial administrative work, which could have been done by full-time administrators. I did these jobs as extra work without extra payment or promotion. Such trivial work was very time consuming, but yielded no visible achievements. You know, if you completed it well, no one would notice it but take it for granted; but if you could not do it well, everyone would know it and would even probably condemn you. When you were devoted to much time and effort to the work other than your teaching, some colleagues thought you were pursuing more rewards. But things turned out that you just did the work other people thought were “trivial”, the honour or reward would go to other colleagues. I’m not stupid. You know, you cannot push the horse without feeding him. You cannot let me do all the work just because I am younger than other teachers.
There was once one colleague who was cooperating with me in coordinating the guest teachers’ work. After we completed the work and reported to the Dean. The colleague said to the Dean that “Lin was a good little girl. She did a good job.” How ridiculous it is that, you know, my colleague could say this in front of the Dean. I was not a “little girl” but a colleague of her. She should not judge me like this. After all, she was not supposed to judge me at all. We are equal in doing the job. What she said was like she was like a leader and I was a subordinate of her.
It was said to be the unwritten rule that the journals only consider papers by those authors whose professional titles are professor or associate professor, or those sponsored by the national or provincial funds.(from interview).
5.2. Becoming a Student Again
Although I became a student again, I just found it totally different from the days when I was a student before. When I was attending a lecture or seminar at the university, I could not help reflecting on my past learning or teaching experience and comparing what I see with what happened before. When I learned some new expressions in daily life, either in or out of class, I would think how to teach this to my students in the future. So it could be said that I had a double person in me, both a student and a teacher in one.
I noticed that what we have learned in our textbooks before are mostly written language, which is quite different from the language people use here before. So I paid attention to the language people use in daily life. For example, when I went to the shop, I will observe the English expressions of many things on shelves. I also made use of every opportunity to talk with people, either my colleagues at the university, or people outside the university in everyday life. I also notice the language teachers use in classroom teaching or tutorials. For example, we usually say “are you clear?” to check students’ understanding in class, but the teachers here normally say “Does that make sense?”. Differences like this are interesting and I hope I can use some of them in my future teaching.
I noticed that many of the students in class from other countries are very active in classroom discussions or answering questions from teachers. I was a little bit shy at the very beginning and were afraid of talking too much in class. But later when I noticed that other students were talking so freely, without caring much about their own accent, I became more brave to engage in the talking and discussing in class. I also noticed that your accent is nothing to be ashamed of, but can be something you should be proud of. It is a manifestation of your unique identity.
I attended many workshops and seminars at the university, and noticed how people attend to various opinions or views that are different from their own. These activities have broadened my horizon and international vision in seeking out consensus among different views. I also find I can accept many things that I could hardly accept before. For example, one of my PhD colleagues was a gay. I was a little shocked at the beginning when I knew this. But gradually, I found I began to accept this and take it for granted. If you ask my view now, I would be very certain that I think this is quite normal. There are many things you might find strange but it is totally fine in another cultural or social context.
5.3. Reconstructing Professional Teacher and Researcher Identities
During my PhD research study, I attended many courses on the teaching methodology of English language. The teachers delivered the teaching with vivid teaching methods. And I had a better understanding of how to apply the traditional and classic teaching methods, such as communicative language teaching, task-based language teaching, to my teaching practice. After I come back to China, I applied these teaching methods to my own classroom, and it yielded a totally different teaching effect from my previous teaching prior to my PhD study.
The journey in my PhD indeed helped me a lot for my teaching and research. It can be a major reason for my professional development at present. I have changed my understanding of the relationship between teaching and research. I am now convinced that doing research is not isolated from teaching, instead, it can in turn provide more insight to my teaching. Meanwhile, I can also find research topics from my teaching practice. They are not mutually exclusive but can benefit each other. Also, one can be a good teacher and a good researcher at the same time.
6. Discussion
7. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Wu, X. A Longitudinal Study of EFL Teacher Agency and Sustainable Identity Development: A Positioning Theory Perspective. Sustainability 2023, 15, 48. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15010048
Wu X. A Longitudinal Study of EFL Teacher Agency and Sustainable Identity Development: A Positioning Theory Perspective. Sustainability. 2023; 15(1):48. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15010048
Chicago/Turabian StyleWu, Xinxin. 2023. "A Longitudinal Study of EFL Teacher Agency and Sustainable Identity Development: A Positioning Theory Perspective" Sustainability 15, no. 1: 48. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15010048
APA StyleWu, X. (2023). A Longitudinal Study of EFL Teacher Agency and Sustainable Identity Development: A Positioning Theory Perspective. Sustainability, 15(1), 48. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15010048