Publication: The Impact of Reflective Practices of English Language Teachers on the Development of A Sense of Agency
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Tütüniş, Birsen
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Abstract
Language teaching has undergone many changes for several decades and is still changing within this complex dynamic
system. Teaching is recognized as both individually practised and socially shaped phenomenon with lots of constraints
imposed by the society. The concept of agency has been theorized from an interdisciplinary approach incorporating
academic disciplines of sociology, philosophy, anthropology, management, economics and the related fields. The aim of
this paper is to address this gap in the literature by examining the experiences of language teachers working with young
learners. There is limited research literature that specifically addresses the practices of teacher agencies in language
teaching. However, Johnson (2009) for example, based on Vygotsky's (1958) sociocultural theory, suggests to take a
sociocultural approach in teacher education to acknowledge both social forces and the individual experiences that shape
language teaching. A qualitative pilot study was conducted with 30 language teachers working in disadvantaged
neighborhoods in İstanbul, Turkey with the purpose of finding out their reflective practices on the development of a
sense of agency. The data was analyzed and interpreted from the basis of “professionalism and teacher identity” and
provisional insights are provided for policy makers, teachers, administrators and leaders at various levels in schools and
faculties of education that we believe will contribute to the literature on teacher agencies and professionalization in the
field of second/foreign language teaching.