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Original Articles

Putting the child first how one student teacher negotiated the moral landscape of teaching

Pages 51-60 | Received 03 Sep 2002, Accepted 25 Jun 2003, Published online: 25 Apr 2008
 

Abstract

One student teacher's moral development process is uncovered, using a case study approach to capture the participant's internal processes and the constructed social context. The participant was in the first eight‐week placement of her semester‐long student teaching assignment, a kindergarten classroom in a rural public elementary school with a diverse student body. The participant believed that her professional moral responsibility was to “put the child first.” She believed this included protecting the child's dignity and autonomy, creating a close classroom community, establishing trust between teacher and child, fostering productive communication among all adults in the child's life, and safeguarding the child's health and safety. The participant maintained these priorities in her daily teaching practice and used them in her decision‐making process. However, the decisions that she was required to make during her early weeks of student teaching led to a modified understanding of her values. Democratic discourse and professional autonomy were associated with the process of moral development in this case. Theoretical and practical implications are described.

Notes

Tel.: +1–815–753–8082; fax: +1–815–753–8594. E‐mail address: [email protected] (M. Dunn).

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