“I feel the Responsibility”

The Nexus of Secondary Teacher Knowledge, Rural Education, and Emergent Bilinguals

Authors

  • Nidza V. Marichal University of Florida

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3776/tpre.2021.v11n2p67-94

Keywords:

rural education, teacher education, bilingual education, English learners, teacher knowledge, place-based education, Latinx, Hispanic, secondary school settings, relationship-building, emergent bilinguals

Abstract

Rural schools in the United States are facing an increase in the number of Emergent Bilinguals (EBs). Teachers in rural communities must facilitate learning for EB students whose linguistic and cultural backgrounds differ from the mainstream. However, rural teachers are less prepared to address EBs’ educational needs, and little is known about the actual teacher knowledge (TK) required to provide effective EB instruction in secondary rural settings. Grounded in teacher knowledge and place-based education frameworks, this qualitative study examined what teachers say they know related to the teaching and learning of EBs in a rural secondary school community. The study addressed two main questions: (1) What personal and professional knowledges do secondary teachers reveal about teaching EBs in rural settings? and (2) What place-based knowledges do secondary teachers reveal about their work with EBs? Primary data from four secondary teachers teaching EBs in a rural school in the southeastern United States consisted of video-recorded interviews and photo elicitation that illuminated teachers’ told narratives of their personal, professional, and place-based experiences via stories. Thematic data analysis followed an iterative approach. Findings from this study demonstrated that the teachers’ personal and place-based knowledges emerged as the most prominent influences in their work. Teachers’ bilingualism, hispanidad, and faith were leveraged to build relationships with their rural secondary EBs. Thus, relationship-building was central to teachers’ knowledge-base of working with EBs. A four-dimensional teacher knowledge model is proposed. Findings may inform teacher education programs and extend the research base on rural secondary EB education

 

 

Author Biography

Nidza V. Marichal, University of Florida

Nidza V. Marichal, PhD, received her degree in curriculum and instruction with a specialization in ESOL and bilingual education from the University of Florida. Prior to joining the PhD program at UF, she received a Bachelor of Science degree from Yale University and a Master of Arts degree in Spanish linguistics/Second Language Acquisition at the University of Florida. She has taught university and high school Spanish for more than 20 years and has served on various administrative committees. Nidza worked as Program Coordinator of Project STELLAR from 2016 to 2018, facilitating professional development to educators of English learners (ELs) in rural north Florida. Presently, Dr. Marichal works as a Post Doctoral Associate in the School of Teaching and Learning, College of Education at the University of Florida and is the president of the North Central Florida LULAC council, seeking to advance Hispanic Americans civil rights. Her research topics include multilingual education, English learners, teacher education, teacher knowledge, secondary and rural educational settings.

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Published

2021-11-09

How to Cite

Marichal, N. V. (2021). “I feel the Responsibility”: The Nexus of Secondary Teacher Knowledge, Rural Education, and Emergent Bilinguals . Theory & Practice in Rural Education, 11(2), 67–94. https://doi.org/10.3776/tpre.2021.v11n2p67-94