ABSTRACT

Responding to multiple scholarly, policy, and practical calls for a greater focus on clinical teacher preparation, this volume operates on the assumption that few experiences in future teachers’ training are more important than their field experiences. This text introduces the model of critical, project-based (CPB) clinical experiences, which provides teacher candidates with exemplary on-the-ground training, honors veteran teachers as school-based teacher educators, and offers university-based teacher educators new roles that ensure their practices and scholarship are explicitly relevant to all of schools’ constituents. Answering the call for relevant, high quality, clinically-based teacher education, this volume will offer scholarly and narrative examinations of examples of CPB clinical experiences that will be of interest to all involved in and impacted by educator preparation programs.

chapter 1|17 pages

Critical, Project-Based Clinical Experiences

Their Origins and Their Elements

chapter 2|16 pages

The Affective Archive Project

Engaging Affect Toward Critical Practice in a School-Immersed Literacy Methods Course

chapter 3|15 pages

Valuing Uncertainty

The Role of Purposeful, Supported Discomfort in Critical, Project-Based Teacher Education

chapter 6|14 pages

Praxis Meets Praxis

Exploring the Development of Teachers of Writing in a Critical, Project-Based Clinical Experience

chapter 7|17 pages

Resistance, Persistence, and a Whole Lot of Wobble

Two Teacher Educators Compare Their Critical, Project-Based Clinical Experiences

chapter 9|16 pages

Writing Our Lives

Preparing Teachers to Teach 21st Century Writers In and Out of School

chapter 10|16 pages

Citizenship and Power

Perspectives From a Critical, Project-Based Clinical Experience