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Shifting Dominant Narratives of Teacher Development: New Directions for Expanding Access to the Educator Workforce Through Grow Your Own Programs

Journal

EDUCATIONAL RESEARCHER
Volume 51, Issue 1, Pages 51-57

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.3102/0013189X211049762

Keywords

cultural analysis; diversity; teacher characteristics; teacher education; development

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GYO programs aim to recruit individuals from the local community, including high school students, paraeducators, community organizers, parents, and career changers, challenging traditional assumptions about teacher development.
Grow Your Own (GYO) programs are designed to recruit high school students, paraeducators, community organizers and parents, and/or career changers from the local community to join the educator workforce. When considering the nontraditional teacher pools that may enter the profession through GYO programs, commonly held assumptions about who teachers are, how they are developed, and what is most important for supporting their growth are challenged. This article reframes conventional narratives in teacher education by exploring the ways in which GYO programs offer counternarratives that reimagine teacher development by valuing (a) intersectional views of ethnoracial diversity, (b) resilience as an important teacher characteristic, (c) multiple modes of assessment as evidence of teacher learning, (d) ethnoracially diverse and community-based teacher educators, (e) culturally responsive pedagogy and place-based learning, and (f) local community school commitment.

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