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Who AM I?: understanding high school computer science teachers' professional identity

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Published:29 February 2012Publication History

ABSTRACT

Quality computer science (CS) teachers are critical for secondary computing education. In addition to increasing the number of high school (HS) CS teachers, there is a great need for supporting those teachers to grow and stay as committed, effective teachers. Recent literature on teacher education suggests that teachers' sense of commitment and (other aspects of) teaching profession is tightly linked with their teacher identity. However, the current educational system in the U.S. does not provide typical contexts for teachers to build a sense of identity as CS teachers. This study is intended to gain an initial understanding of CS teachers' perceptions about their own professional identity and potential factors that might contribute to these perceptions. Our findings indicate that current HS teachers teaching CS courses do not necessarily identify themselves as CS teachers. They have different perceptions related to CS teaching. Four kinds of factors can contribute to these perceptions: teachers' educational background and certification, CS curriculum and department hierarchy, availability of CS teacher community, and teachers' perceptions about the field of CS.

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      cover image ACM Conferences
      SIGCSE '12: Proceedings of the 43rd ACM technical symposium on Computer Science Education
      February 2012
      734 pages
      ISBN:9781450310987
      DOI:10.1145/2157136

      Copyright © 2012 ACM

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      New York, NY, United States

      Publication History

      • Published: 29 February 2012

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      SIGCSE '12 Paper Acceptance Rate100of289submissions,35%Overall Acceptance Rate1,595of4,542submissions,35%

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