Deakin University
Browse

Mobile teachers: becoming professional mobile educators in the marketization of education

Version 2 2024-06-03, 07:40
Version 1 2015-08-14, 11:08
chapter
posted on 2024-06-03, 07:40 authored by A Vongalis-Macrow, R Arber
The movement of educators, from local systems into international education systems, underscores an increasingly important development in the internationalization of education. The chapter explores the experiences of educators creating mobile careers in education by working outside their local education systems. Drawing on Urry’s (2004) concept of mobility, this chapter explores the mobile professionalism of teachers working outside their local and national education systems. The chapter aims to theorize the concept of mobility as it applies to teaching professionals as they shape their professional and private spaces to construct mobile professional identities, knowledge, and practices. The chapter will explore case studies of eight mobile educators with an aim to capture their mobility trajectories. These trajectories will be critically discussed as a way to explore both the motivations that drive educators to become mobile and the meanings that shape their knowledge and practices as they negotiate successive international contexts. Shaped by the vastitudes of cultural and gendered identifications and variegated agency, mobility has differentiated consequences for teacher professional identities, career trajectories, and professional practices. The mobility of educators presents challenges for teacher education what counts as their professional knowledge in the “disorganized capitalism” of international education.

History

Chapter number

39

Pagination

629-644

ISBN-13

9783642541452

Language

eng

Publication classification

B Book chapter, B1.1 Book chapter

Copyright notice

2015, Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg

Extent

62

Editor/Contributor(s)

Zhang Y

Publisher

Springer-Verlag

Place of publication

Berlin, Germany

Title of book

Handbook of mobile teaching and learning