Becoming Inclusive Teacher Educators: Self-Study as a Professional Learning Tool

This article describes a self-study inquiry project designed and conducted by a self-study group at a Faculty of Education in an Atlantic Canadian University. The seven-member group engaged in a collaborative self-study inquiry while adopting Universal Design for Learning (UDL) principles in their t...

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Autores principales: Saiqa Azam, Karen Goodnough, Alireza Moghaddam, Christine Arnold, Sharon Penney, Gabrielle Young, Kimberly Maich
Formato: article
Lenguaje:EN
Publicado: Georgia Southern University 2021
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Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/36d3613f097d48d789579af34ea7e33c
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spelling oai:doaj.org-article:36d3613f097d48d789579af34ea7e33c2021-12-02T18:48:35ZBecoming Inclusive Teacher Educators: Self-Study as a Professional Learning Tool1931-474410.20429/ijsotl.2021.150204https://doaj.org/article/36d3613f097d48d789579af34ea7e33c2021-11-01T00:00:00Zhttps://digitalcommons.georgiasouthern.edu/ij-sotl/vol15/iss2/4https://doaj.org/toc/1931-4744This article describes a self-study inquiry project designed and conducted by a self-study group at a Faculty of Education in an Atlantic Canadian University. The seven-member group engaged in a collaborative self-study inquiry while adopting Universal Design for Learning (UDL) principles in their teacher education practices and documented their professional learning. This yearlong self-study inquiry project encompassed several data collection methods to examine inclusive practices of self-study group members, including personal reflections, minutes of weekly meetings, artifacts, and field notes. This article focuses on how UDL provided a means for three group members to critically examine their inclusive practices at the beginning, during, and following the collaborative self-study inquiry. Using a case study methodology, self-study cases of these three faculty members—Angela, Ryan, and Sarah (Pseudonyms)—were developed. The cases reported on the journey of these faculty members in improving their inclusive practice through their engagement in self-study.Saiqa AzamKaren GoodnoughAlireza MoghaddamChristine ArnoldSharon PenneyGabrielle YoungKimberly MaichGeorgia Southern Universityarticleinclusive practicesinclusive teacher education practicesself-studyuniversal design for learning (udl)Theory and practice of educationLB5-3640ENInternational Journal for the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning, Vol 15, Iss 2 (2021)
institution DOAJ
collection DOAJ
language EN
topic inclusive practices
inclusive teacher education practices
self-study
universal design for learning (udl)
Theory and practice of education
LB5-3640
spellingShingle inclusive practices
inclusive teacher education practices
self-study
universal design for learning (udl)
Theory and practice of education
LB5-3640
Saiqa Azam
Karen Goodnough
Alireza Moghaddam
Christine Arnold
Sharon Penney
Gabrielle Young
Kimberly Maich
Becoming Inclusive Teacher Educators: Self-Study as a Professional Learning Tool
description This article describes a self-study inquiry project designed and conducted by a self-study group at a Faculty of Education in an Atlantic Canadian University. The seven-member group engaged in a collaborative self-study inquiry while adopting Universal Design for Learning (UDL) principles in their teacher education practices and documented their professional learning. This yearlong self-study inquiry project encompassed several data collection methods to examine inclusive practices of self-study group members, including personal reflections, minutes of weekly meetings, artifacts, and field notes. This article focuses on how UDL provided a means for three group members to critically examine their inclusive practices at the beginning, during, and following the collaborative self-study inquiry. Using a case study methodology, self-study cases of these three faculty members—Angela, Ryan, and Sarah (Pseudonyms)—were developed. The cases reported on the journey of these faculty members in improving their inclusive practice through their engagement in self-study.
format article
author Saiqa Azam
Karen Goodnough
Alireza Moghaddam
Christine Arnold
Sharon Penney
Gabrielle Young
Kimberly Maich
author_facet Saiqa Azam
Karen Goodnough
Alireza Moghaddam
Christine Arnold
Sharon Penney
Gabrielle Young
Kimberly Maich
author_sort Saiqa Azam
title Becoming Inclusive Teacher Educators: Self-Study as a Professional Learning Tool
title_short Becoming Inclusive Teacher Educators: Self-Study as a Professional Learning Tool
title_full Becoming Inclusive Teacher Educators: Self-Study as a Professional Learning Tool
title_fullStr Becoming Inclusive Teacher Educators: Self-Study as a Professional Learning Tool
title_full_unstemmed Becoming Inclusive Teacher Educators: Self-Study as a Professional Learning Tool
title_sort becoming inclusive teacher educators: self-study as a professional learning tool
publisher Georgia Southern University
publishDate 2021
url https://doaj.org/article/36d3613f097d48d789579af34ea7e33c
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AT christinearnold becominginclusiveteachereducatorsselfstudyasaprofessionallearningtool
AT sharonpenney becominginclusiveteachereducatorsselfstudyasaprofessionallearningtool
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