| Literature DB >> 34955598 |
Vanessa Rodriguez1, Natalia M Rojas1, Ayesha Rabadi-Raol2, Mariana V Souto-Manning3, Laurie M Brotman1.
Abstract
Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19 pandemic; Early Childhood Education Teachers; Feminist theory; Interviews; Mental health; Pre-Kindergarten teachers; Qualitative; Self-awareness; Self-in-Relation Theory; Teacher identity; Teacher well-being; Teacher-student relationships; Trauma-Informed; Wellness
Year: 2021 PMID: 34955598 PMCID: PMC8692129 DOI: 10.1016/j.ecresq.2021.12.006
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Early Child Res Q ISSN: 0885-2006
Self-identified sociodemographic characteristics of teachers interviewed.
| Pseudonym | Age | Parent | Languages spoken | Skin Color | Race/Ethnicity | Personal income | Years teaching | School borough | Pre-K racial composition |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Elaine | 50–55 | Yes | English | Very Light | White | $60,000-$69,000 | 15 | Brooklyn | Asian 2.9%, Black 64.8%, Latine 26.5%, Other 2.9%, White 2.9% |
| Dimitra | 50–54 | Yes | English, Greek | Very Light | White/Greek | $110,000-$119,000 | 28 | Brooklyn | Asian 5.5%, Black 27.8%, Latine 66.7% |
| Nancy | 50–55 | No | English | Light | White/Irish | $100,000-$109,000 | 28 | Queens | Asian 13.9%, Black 1.4%, Latine 73.6%, Other 8.3%, White 2.8% |
| Monica | 45–50 | Yes | English | Light | White | $110,000-$119,000 | 23 | Queens | Asian 13.9%, Black 1.4%, Latine 73.6%, Other 8.3%, White 2.8% |
| Rachel | 50–55 | Yes | English | Medium | White/Jewish | $119,000-$129,000 | 29 | Queens | Asian 26.5%, Black 2.9%, Latine 50%, White 20.6% |
| Anne | 60–65 | No | English, Spanish | Very Light | White | $80,000-$89,999 | 32 | Queens | Asian 26.5%, Black 2.9%, Latine 50%, White 20.6% |
| 7 | 40–45 | Yes | English | Medium | Hispanic-Latine | $90,000-$99,000 | 19 | Manhattan | Latine 100% |
| 8 | 40–45 | No | English | Light | White | $110,000-$119,000 | 24 | Brooklyn | Black 25.7%, Latine 62.9%, White 11.4%, |
| 9 | 45–50 | Yes | English | Light | White | $90,000-$99,000 | 24 | Queens | Asian 5.9%, Black 52.9%, Latine 35.3%, Other 5.9% |
| 10 | 40–45 | No | English | Light | White | $90,000-$99,000 | 19 | Brooklyn | Asian 15.2%, Black 63%, Latine 8.7%, Other 10.9%, White 2.2% |
| 11 | 60–65 | Yes | English, Spanish | Medium | Hispanic-Latine | $80,000-$89,999 | 30 | Brooklyn | Black 10%, Latine 90% |
| 12 | 45–50 | Yes | English, Spanish | Medium | Hispanic-Latine | $110,000-$119,000 | 23 | Brooklyn | Asian 5.6%, Black 27.7%, Latine 66.7% |
| 13 | 60–65 | NC | English | Light | White | $80,000-$89,999 | 28 | Queens | Asian 6.8%, Black 2.7%, Latine 87.8%, White 2.7% |
| 14 | 45–50 | Yes | English | Medium | White/Jewish | $100,000-$109,000 | 21 | Brooklyn | Asian 41.7%, Latine 23.6%, Other race 1.4%, White 33.3% |
| 15 | 35–40 | Yes | English | Light | White | $60,000-$69,000 | 15 | Brooklyn | Asian 41.7%, Latine 23.6%, Other race 1.4%, White 33.3% |
| 16 | 35–40 | No | English | Light | White | $90,000-$99,000 | 15 | Queens | Asian 38.2%, Black 5.9%, Latine 23.5%, White 32.4% |
Note. According to New York City Department of Housing and Preservation Development in 2020, a moderate-income household (81%−120% AMI) for a three-person household ranges from $81,920-$122,880 (“Area median income,” n.d.).
Area median income. (n.d.) Retrieved from https://www1.nyc.gov/site/hpd/services-and-information/area-median-income.page.
Poverty categories. (n.d.) Retrieved from https://www1.nyc.gov/site/opportunity/poverty-in-nyc/poverty-measure.page.
NC indicates data was not collected due to teacher preference.
Process establishing trustworthiness in thematic analysis.
| Phase 1: Familiarizing yourself with the data | Extended analysis of the dataDocumentation of theoretical and reflective thoughts, potential codes and themesData stored in well-organized electronic archive with records of notes and transcriptsAudio recorded interviews and verbatim transcriptions |
| Phase 2: Generating initial codes | Peer training and debriefingUse of a coding frameworkAudit trail of code generationDocumentation of team meetings regarding coding |
| Phase 3: Searching for themes | Researcher triangulationMaking sense of theme connectionsIdentified counterexamplesKept detailed notes of theme development |
| Phase 4: Reviewing themes | Researcher triangulationFaculty peer critical feedbackThemes vetted by team membersTested for referential adequacy by returning to the raw data |
| Phase 5: Defining and naming themes | Researcher triangulationPeer debriefingTeam consensus on themes |
| Phase 6: Producing the report | Peer DebriefingDescribing process of coding an analysis in sufficient detailThick descriptions of context and audit trailReport on reasons for theoretical, methodological, and analytical choices throughout study |
Note. Strategies for establishing trustworthiness adapted from Nowell (2017).
Five Awarenesses of Teaching Coding schema by category, subcategory and code.
| Awareness of: | ||
| Self-as-a-Teacher | Private Self | Needs, Life plan, Values, Identity, Experiences, |
| Public Self | Authenticity, On display | |
| Perceived Self | Perception by Students, Parents, Colleagues | |
| Teaching Process | Tangible Practices | Routines, Organization, Planning, Decisions, Behaviors, Continued learning |
| Intangible Practices | Classroom culture, Culture of practice | |
| Learner | Feedback | Intentional, Unintentional feedback |
| Needs | Emotional, Physical, Academic | |
| Development | Past, Present, Future | |
| Identity | Personality, Race, Ethnicity, | |
| Interaction | Connection | Relationship, Bond, Love |
| Working Together | Collaboration, Co-construction | |
| Mutual Effects | Reciprocity, Feedback loop, Teacher-student Impact, Effect on each other | |
| Synergy | Synchrony, Flow | |
| Context | External – student | Student's family, Environment: Weather |
| External – Institution | Physical space, Philosophy, Colleagues | |
| External – large scale | Policy, Mandates, | |
Note. Underline indicates new codes added to schema during analysis in the present study.