Pedagogical habitus engagement : teacher learning and adaptation in a professional learning community
Date
2016
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University
Publisher's version
Publisher's version
Abstract
Situated within the context of teaching in post apartheid South Africa, this article
discusses the establishment and functioning of a professional learning community (PLC)
that was constituted to generate pedagogical learning and adaptation among practicing
teachers in consonance with a socially just teaching orientation. Drawing on the thinking
tools of Bourdieu, the article offers a view of PLCs as a form of “habitus engagement” that
engages with teachers’ firmly established pedagogical identities, their “pedagogical
habitus,” to effect adaptation and change in their classroom pedagogy. The exemplifying
basis of this article is empirical data drawn from a 2-year PLC process where teachers from
different school contexts collaborated to find ways to conceptually and pragmatically shift
and change their pedagogy. The article highlights both the limits and possibilities of
teachers’ pedagogical change and concludes by arguing that the ongoing, reflexive, and
dialogical PLC process, as a form of habitus engagement, holds the potential to challenge,
adapt, and shift teachers’ pedagogical habitus to conceptually and pragmatically include
a more socially just teaching orientation in their classroom pedagogy.
Description
CITATION: Feldman, J. 2016. Pedagogical habitus engagement : teacher learning and adaptation in a professional learning community. Educational Research for Social Change, 5(2):65-80.
The original publication is available at http://ersc.nmmu.ac.za
The original publication is available at http://ersc.nmmu.ac.za
Keywords
Professional learning community (PLS), Bourdieu, Pierre -- 1930-2002 -- Theories, Teaching -- 21st century -- South Africa, Habitus (Sociology) -- Teaching
Citation
Feldman, J. 2016. Pedagogical habitus engagement : teacher learning and adaptation in a professional learning community. Educational Research for Social Change, 5(2):65-80