TY - JOUR
T1 - ICT Transformation in Education
T2 - Its Impact on Language Teachers’ Professional Identities
AU - Yazici, Elif Aydin
AU - Atay, Derin
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© Urmia University Press
PY - 2023
Y1 - 2023
N2 - Rapid and continuous changes in digital technologies have changed both classroom practices and teacher profiles in education. It can be argued that a new context of teaching may lead some teachers to develop a different teacher identity in order to meet the needs of the era. Within this perspective, this case study attempts to explore the impacts of Information and Communication Technologies (ICT) revolution in education on teachers’ professional identity through the lens of three English instructors from three different contexts in Turkey. The study particularly focuses on reflections of teachers during the pandemic. As a theoretical framework, the study adopts Wenger’s (1997) social theory of learning and, within this framework, it discusses these teachers’ professional identities in relation to their ICT usage. In particular, three modes of belonging, Engagement, Imagination and Alignment, are underlined. A qualitative approach is employed based on the written history documents of the participants and semi-structured interviews as data collection tools. The findings are gathered with a deductive thematic analysis, and they illustrate that teachers have some external and internal difficulties regarding their ICT usage, and they form a new shape of professional identity mainly through collaboration, community expertise and contributing new ideas in their school contexts. Although the use of new digital technologies mostly enables them to adopt a positive and modern teacher identity in their teaching contexts, it also leads some of them to sometimes question their teacher identity due to their limited ICT knowledge and competence.
AB - Rapid and continuous changes in digital technologies have changed both classroom practices and teacher profiles in education. It can be argued that a new context of teaching may lead some teachers to develop a different teacher identity in order to meet the needs of the era. Within this perspective, this case study attempts to explore the impacts of Information and Communication Technologies (ICT) revolution in education on teachers’ professional identity through the lens of three English instructors from three different contexts in Turkey. The study particularly focuses on reflections of teachers during the pandemic. As a theoretical framework, the study adopts Wenger’s (1997) social theory of learning and, within this framework, it discusses these teachers’ professional identities in relation to their ICT usage. In particular, three modes of belonging, Engagement, Imagination and Alignment, are underlined. A qualitative approach is employed based on the written history documents of the participants and semi-structured interviews as data collection tools. The findings are gathered with a deductive thematic analysis, and they illustrate that teachers have some external and internal difficulties regarding their ICT usage, and they form a new shape of professional identity mainly through collaboration, community expertise and contributing new ideas in their school contexts. Although the use of new digital technologies mostly enables them to adopt a positive and modern teacher identity in their teaching contexts, it also leads some of them to sometimes question their teacher identity due to their limited ICT knowledge and competence.
KW - ICT
KW - digital identity
KW - digital technologies
KW - professional identity
KW - teacher identity
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85150309450&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.30466/ijltr.2023.121276
DO - 10.30466/ijltr.2023.121276
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85150309450
SN - 2322-1291
VL - 11
SP - 141
EP - 156
JO - Iranian Journal of Language Teaching Research
JF - Iranian Journal of Language Teaching Research
IS - 1
ER -