Source: Teaching Education, Volume 25, Issue 1, 2014, pages 24-42
This article examines how an inquiry-based social studies student teaching seminar helped three preservice teachers negotiate the pressures of standards-based reforms during student teaching.
The author first explores how initial perceptions of standardization and high-stakes testing corroded images of powerful teaching and created an ex post facto relationship with teaching social studies.
The author then examines how an inquiry-based seminar mitigated these initial impressions by
(1) suspending the authority of accountability;
(2) creating contact through collaborative inquiry; and
(3) refracting practice.
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