This week’s
reading included a chapter from Stock’s The Dialogic Curriculum (1995).
The chapter, “Teacher Research as Storytelling” is an introduction to the
premises that teachers’ research is presented through anecdotal storytelling
and for that reason is primarily ignored or discounted formally in the
profession but has been shared among teachers informally and can greatly
influence and benefit teachers and learners.
Stock defends the value of storytelling and anecdotal based research
within teaching by illustrating that these practices exist also in the fields
of law and medicine. Maybe because I am
new to the field of Education there is nothing revealing or revolutionary
here. Storytelling as a means of
discerning meaning and guiding actions is common and universal. Aesop’s fables, the parables of Jesus, other
religious scriptures, family oral history, any history, biographies, novels,
and news media are all about recounting specific incidents, events, and
personal behavior through some form of story.
An endless cycle of life imitating art, art imitating life surrounds us.
How could educational research NOT have its basis in story?
I appreciated
the inclusion of the poem and the line that stories “aren’t just
entertainment.” (Stock, 1995, p. 96) I think this is true. Every story reveals,
teaches, inspires, or highlights something about us. And I found it timely to read the quote from
Loren Barritt, a professor of Education that says “Research is just the story
someone tells. What counts is who gets to tell the story.” (Stock, p. 96) Indeed! I had the same day that I read this, listened
to a podcast from Malcolm Gladwell called “The Foot Soldier of Birmingham”
(Revisionist History, 2017). The episode
is about a statue in a park that commemorates the Civil Rights Movement and is
based on a photo taken in Birmingham of a policeman with a dog attacking a
young Black boy. The statue tells a
“true story” of our history, while distorting the details of the policeman, the
dog, and the boy. The person telling the
story, the artist, has subjectivity that influences him to create this statue by
consciously portraying the boy from the photo smaller, younger, and more
African looking, portraying the policeman who was reportedly trying to pull the
dog back, bigger and not at all concerned that the dog is attacking the boy,
and portraying the dog more wolf like and threatening. And it turns out the boy wasn’t even a “foot
soldier” of the Civil Rights Movement, but a passing bystander. But this is how we tell our stories. Real events, behaviors, actions perceived
differently by different viewers. And
then told and passed on through different mediums and lenses of
subjectivity. Is this a problem? Is truth in the details or the interpretation? Is the answer different
for history, politics, art, religion, or education? And who
gets to tell the story?
The second
reading was from Rex & Schiller’s Using Discourse Analysis to Improve Classroom
Interaction (2009). This was a
complementary pairing of readings in some respects. Rex & Schiller discuss interpretation of dialogue as being
influenced by context, assumptions, and background information including “your
own beliefs, values, and dispositions that lead you to make assumptions about
what is occurring.” (Rex & Schiller, p. 16) But the sections I found most
interesting were about identity (pp.19-24); recognizing the identities of our
students in ways that affirm their identities and positioning them through our constructive
dialogue to assume identities that will aid them to participate more
successfully in the learning environment.
I recall an adult GED prep-class student who strongly felt another
teacher’s disdain for his abilities in Math.
Since we rotated the students for Math lessons among 3 GED classes, one
of which I was teaching as a long-term substitute, I arranged for this student
to be in my Math group which was a higher level. He seemed to appreciate the confidence I had
in him to handle the lessons and I think because of that he was more open to
making the effort to do the work, rather than display combativeness with the
teacher. I believe that my positioning
him as a capable student and my appreciation for the world he lived in with
various challenges increased his self-image and motivation to apply himself in
my class. I had been warned about this
“difficult student” before taking on the class but I found that we could form
our own teacher-student relationship and identities that were free of other
people’s interpretations and conclusions.
Rex & Schiller provided a valuable model to follow when they wrote
“We choose ways to use language that recognize identities and selves in order
to engage and affirm learners, particularly those who are most reluctant.” (p. 20) I was happy that my reluctant student
felt that I had recognized his capabilities.
He said that I “got him.” So, who
gets to tell the story? We do. Teachers AND learners.
Hello Deborah,
ReplyDeleteYour reading summary was very interesting. I agreed with you an your quote. We certainly choose ways to use pertinent language which will recognize student's identity and personality, in order to use them as an asset to their learning process. Accepting and welcoming students identity will definitely be beneficial for both teachers and students. When students know their input is welcome and valued, they will become fully engaged and eager to participate in the learning process. They will become successful learners and teachers will be happy and proud they were a key player in the process.
Yes, Teachers and students get to construct and tell the story!
Thank you, Deborah, for sharing your thoughts, experiences, and connections to this week's readings. Reading your blog helped me realize why I struggled with the idea that storytelling is research. You said that "But this is how we tell our stories. Real events, behaviors, actions perceived differently by different viewers. And then told and passed on through different mediums and lenses of subjectivity. Is this a problem? Is truth in the details or the interpretation?" which helped me realize that what troubles me about storytelling as research is how much interpretation is involved in story telling. When I am looking at research I want to know the facts and I want to be able to draw my own conclusions and my own interpretations as well as read the interpretations of the researcher (storyteller). I believe it is problematic when the details (which I consider the truth) is affected by subjectivity. But I guess everything is affected by subjectivity.
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