Abstract
In response to Cochran‐Smith and Lytle's (Citation1998) call for Other ways of researching and thinking about educational research and the recent call by the US Secretary of Education to reform ‘teacher‐training’ programs (Schoicet Citation2002), this article presents a research study focusing on a reform effort in teacher education. The study moved beyond the ‘findings’ of a critical discourse analysis of the foundational humanist assumptions of the Professional Development School (PDS) model as manifested at a large mid‐west research university. The study uses an analysis of the ‘data/findings’ from Other theoretical perspectives. Using critical discourse analysis of interviews, archival texts and research texts, the contradictions, interruptions and technologies of power emerged. Data from this contested site highlighted multiple discourses concerning social education, educational reform, professionalization, and progress. The results revealed the historical and political discourses that inter and enclose the PDS model, such as reductive gendered notions of the ‘professional’, ‘good teaching’ and the valorization of ‘practice’. This article presents three different ways of analyzing the PDS data: as a psychoanalytic object of desire (Britzman Citation1998); as a dereferentialized term (Readings Citation1996); and a floating signifier (Anderson Citation1998). Thus, it presents ways of rethinking knowledge and power in leadership in education (Lincoln Citation1998, Popkewitz Citation1998a, Rapp Citation2002).
Notes
Lisa J. Cary is an Assistant Professor in Curriculum and Instruction in the College of Education at the University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX 78712, USA (e‐mail: [email protected]). She has worked in Australia, Canada and the USA and has published in the International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education, Qualitative Inquiry, The Journal of Curriculum Theorizing, and Theory and Research in Social Education. Her interests include postmodern curriculum theories, gender studies and multicultural education.
Other is capitalized and italicized to emphasize a paradigm shift.
The Draft Evaluation was particularly difficult to obtain and it was incomplete.