The Beliefs and Experiences of World Language Teachers in the US

By (author) Pamela M. Wesely

Publication date:

11 June 2024

Publisher

Multilingual Matters

Dimensions:

234x156mm
6x9"

ISBN-13: 9781800415515

This book tells the stories of 15 world language (WL) teachers in the United States at elementary and secondary levels through rich descriptions of their lived worlds and experiences. In-depth interviews, extensive observations, learner interviews, and document and environment analysis illustrate in detail how teacher beliefs relate to their practices and are mediated and moderated by their learners, institutional demands, equity and access to WL education and other factors. The chapters provide a deep and robust explanation of individual teachers’ teaching lives and a cross-contextual comparison of their experiences, shining a light on the realities and demands of modern US schools. Grounded in the research literature on language teacher beliefs and cognition, this book takes the stance that all teaching is situated and contextual, and that addressing teachers' methods, practices and knowledges in ways that are divorced from their setting and environment has serious limitations. It offers fascinating insights for researchers, language educators and pre- and in-service teachers, with reflection questions at the end of each chapter to guide readers in drawing connections with their own practice, interests and contexts.

Contextualized within a comprehensive overview of the current state of world language education in the United States, Wesely draws on her decades of research with world language teachers to craft a thoughtful and thorough set of portraits of K-12 world language teachers. In each case, she represents the ways in which their beliefs are informed by and interact with their teaching practices, the learners in their classrooms, and communities in which they teach.