‘It takes me half a bottle of whisky to get through one of your assignments’: Exploring one teacher educator's personal experiences of dyslexia
Resource type
Journal Article
Authors/contributors
- Glazzard, Jonathan (Author)
- Dale, Kirsty (Author)
Title
‘It takes me half a bottle of whisky to get through one of your assignments’: Exploring one teacher educator's personal experiences of dyslexia
Abstract
This article uses a life history approach to explore personal experiences of dyslexia of one higher‐education lecturer and its impact on her professional identity. The informant is currently employed as a lecturer of initial teacher training in a UK university. She worked as a primary school teacher for over a decade prior to embarking on an academic career in teacher education. The informant draws on her own experiences as a pupil, teacher and lecturer, and additionally, she presents accounts of student teachers with dyslexia drawn from her current professional context. Although the data are not generalizable, the account nevertheless illustrates the positive impact of the social model of disability for the informant and her students who had been identified as dyslexic during their initial training as teachers. Additionally, the account also illustrates the ways in which teachers' personal experiences of dyslexia can shape professional identities in very positive ways. Implications for both teacher training and pedagogic approaches in schools to support learners with dyslexia are drawn out of the narrative. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved)
Publication
Dyslexia: An International Journal of Research and Practice
Volume
21
Issue
2
Pages
177-192
Date
2015
DOI
ISSN
1099-0909
Short Title
‘It takes me half a bottle of whisky to get through one of your assignments’
Library Catalogue
APA PsycNet
Extra
Place: US
Publisher: John Wiley & Sons
Citation
Glazzard, J., & Dale, K. (2015). ‘It takes me half a bottle of whisky to get through one of your assignments’: Exploring one teacher educator’s personal experiences of dyslexia. Dyslexia: An International Journal of Research and Practice, 21(2), 177–192. https://doi.org/10.1002/dys.1493
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