Teacher Positioning in Rural Spaces

The Role of Autobiography in Culturally Sustaining Pedagogy

Authors

  • Patricia A. DiCerbo George Washington University
  • Lottie L. Baker U.S. Department of State

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3776/tpre.2021.v11n2p95-111

Keywords:

culture, English learner, narrative, rural, teacher education

Abstract

In this qualitative study, we ask how 40 rural educators of English learners (ELs) culturally position themselves and their students. We obtained data through a cultural autobiography assignment that prompted teachers to describe their interactions and relationships with others. Drawing on both rural and non-rural experiences, teachers established their ability to exercise agency, mediated by individual histories and beliefs and the context of their rural settings. Teachers developed their capacity to reflect on the ways they position themselves toward their ELs, a crucial first step in creating culturally sustaining pedagogy. Implications point to the potential of cultural autobiography as a means to heighten rural teachers’ awareness of how their experiences and interactions nuance their cultural identity. Such reflections can expand notions of culture beyond common social identifiers and enable teachers to forge links with their students that would otherwise not be apparent. We suggest this autobiographical process is particularly important for rural teachers who are new to teaching ELs in their classrooms.

Author Biographies

Patricia A. DiCerbo, George Washington University

Patricia A. DiCerbo, EdD, is a former Senior Research Scientist and adjunct faculty at The George Washington University. Her teaching and research interests focus specifically on the areas of content-based instruction, English for academic purposes, teacher education, and cultural identity. Her projects include district- and federally-funded professional development for rural teachers with English learners. Currently, Dr. DiCerbo is overseeing curricula for the Georgetown University English for Heritage Language Speakers program. 

Lottie L. Baker, U.S. Department of State

Lottie L. Baker, EdD, is a regional English language officer in the Foreign Service with the U.S. Department of State. Previously, she was an assistant professor at The George Washington University where she specialized in teacher education and English learners. Her work included evaluating a national professional development grant designed for content teachers with English learners in rural areas.

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Published

2021-11-09

How to Cite

DiCerbo, P. A., & Baker, L. L. (2021). Teacher Positioning in Rural Spaces: The Role of Autobiography in Culturally Sustaining Pedagogy. Theory & Practice in Rural Education, 11(2), 95–111. https://doi.org/10.3776/tpre.2021.v11n2p95-111