Synopses & Reviews
Synopsis
This book explores the unique experiences of a sister school network in Canada and China contextualized through the lens of the Reciprocal Learning Project, which supports the relationship between a school network and teacher education exchange program of two countries. Huang uses theoretical viewpoints from teacher learning and comparative education research to analyse and interpret what has happened in the emerging cross-cultural school network. The book juxtaposes teacher learning and comparative education research from Shanghai and Ontario as teachers in the two places interact and provides detailed descriptions of teacher collaboration to show how these collaborations were initiated, developed, and sustained, as well as the impact brought about from these collaborations. The book offers a unique opportunity to examine how Canadian and Chinese teachers receive and react to opportunities of cross-cultural collaboration and learning.
Synopsis
Chapter 1. Introduction
Chapter 2. Constructing the reciprocal learning space in between
Chapter 3. What teachers can learn
Chapter 4. Motivation and professional identity across the border
Chapter 5. Reflecting on impacts and differences
Chapter 6. Too early to cheer
Chapter 7. Conclusion
Synopsis
Examines in-service teachers' cross-cultural professional learning, bringing professional learning communities (PLC) research into the international setting, and integrating a comparative education lens into the investigation of international teacher communities
Discusses impact of the nascent Canada-China school network on teacher knowledge, practice, motivation to participate, and cosmopolitan professional identity
Argues for the promise of reciprocal learning space and presents a model meant to improve the practice of internationally networked PLCs (INPLCs) and enhance the research on INPLCs from a reciprocal learning lens