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The overall duty of teacher education programs has always been the same- preparing pre-service and in service teachers for teaching- yet, the way the field understands how teachers learn to do their job has been sensibly changing over the last decades (Freeman&Johnson,1998). On the flip side of the traditional positivist paradigm which dictate(d) and model(ed) specific teaching behaviors to achieve determined outcomes, is the vygostskian sociocultural theoretical perspective, which recognizes learning as a unique process shaping and being shaped by the social context in which the individual is…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
The overall duty of teacher education programs has always been the same- preparing pre-service and in service teachers for teaching- yet, the way the field understands how teachers learn to do their job has been sensibly changing over the last decades (Freeman&Johnson,1998). On the flip side of the traditional positivist paradigm which dictate(d) and model(ed) specific teaching behaviors to achieve determined outcomes, is the vygostskian sociocultural theoretical perspective, which recognizes learning as a unique process shaping and being shaped by the social context in which the individual is inserted. This perspective has garnered prominence in the scenario of second/foreign language teacher education and prompted a call for researches on teachers' learning. Joining the various voices aiming at responding to such call, this study's ultimate goal was to show the power of sociocultural perspective in unveiling language teachers' cognition. As such, this study investigates how twoEnglish as a foreign language experienced teachers' conceptions of teaching emerged and evolve as they move along a one-semester teaching experience in which their pedagogical practice is object of study.
Autorenporträt
Márcia de São Thiago Rosa holds a doctorate from the Postgraduate Program in Linguistics and Literary Studies(PPGI) at the Federal University of Santa Catarina(UFSC). Her doctoral research was focused on issues related to the pedagogical choices of English teachers, more specifically, the development of concepts and the role of dialogic mediation.