Article

Collaborative identity development during a global pandemic: exploring teacher identity through the experiences of pre-service high school teachers in England

Details

Citation

Rushton EA, Gibbons S, Brock R, Cao Y, Finesilver C, Jones J, Manning A, Marshall B, Richardson C, Steadman S, Suh S & Towers E (2023) Collaborative identity development during a global pandemic: exploring teacher identity through the experiences of pre-service high school teachers in England. European Journal of Teacher Education, pp. 1-24. https://doi.org/10.1080/02619768.2023.2175663

Abstract
Since early 2020, COVID-19 has had a substantial impact on teacher education. We consider novel aspects of how pre-service teachers have collaboratively developed their professional identities during the pandemic. Drawing on findings from forty-five interviews with pre-service high school teachers working in England during September 2020 – June 2021, we share how collaborative identity development was central and occurred in a variety of spaces, communities and modes. Collaborative identity development featured in how pre-service teachers saw themselves making a positive contribution to society through education and, in strong subject connections. Reflection that is collaborative, personalised, iterative, and separate from notions of formal progression enables positive identity work. Notions of identity are absent from international policy initiatives in ITE (Initial Teacher Education). This case study provides insights for policy makers in and beyond England who aim to support teachers at the beginning of their career so that they are retained.

Keywords
Teacher identity; collaborative identity development; pre-service teachers; global pandemic; teacher retention

Journal
European Journal of Teacher Education

StatusPublished
FundersEconomic and Social Research Council
Publication date31/03/2023
Publication date online31/03/2023
Date accepted by journal29/01/2023
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/35392
PublisherInforma UK Limited
ISSN0261-9768
eISSN1469-5928

People (1)

Professor Lizzie Rushton

Professor Lizzie Rushton

Professor of Education, Education

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