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Featured researches published by Brandon M. Butler.


Action in teacher education | 2012

The Influence of a Collaborative Doctoral Seminar on Emerging Teacher Educator-Researchers.

Todd Dinkelman; Alexandar Cuenca; Brandon M. Butler; Charles Elfer; Jason K. Ritter; Dave Powell; Todd S. Hawley

Over a 7-year period, graduate teaching assistants participated in a teacher education doctoral seminar designed to develop emergent scholarship and practice in teacher education. Six former students in the seminar, all now assistant professors, joined Dinkelman in an open-ended, far-ranging, month-long conversation captured in a threaded, online discussion forum. The study unfolded as a collaborative self-study that made use of this forum and subsequent analyses to address two central research questions: (1) What influence might our seminar have had on your development as an emerging scholar? and (2) What influence might our seminar have had on your development as a teacher educator? In this article, we reflect on how participation in the seminar shaped the emergence of new scholars and teacher educators, as doctoral students and also as new faculty members. Findings suggested the seminar facilitated emergent scholarship by helping participants map the terrain of teacher education research, prompting actual research, and blurring the knower and known in studying teacher education. The seminar also helped develop emergent teacher educators practice through helping participants learn a language for teacher education, develop a sense of program, value collaboration, and define purpose and care for the practice of teacher education. The concluding discussion emphasizes the need for additional inquiry into the ways early-career teacher educators develop commitments to teacher education research and practice.


Studying Teacher Education | 2014

The Impact of a Pedagogy of Teacher Education Seminar on Educator and Future Teacher Educator Identities

Brandon M. Butler; Elizabeth Burns; Christina Frierman; Katrice Hawthorne; Alisa Innes; James Parrott

Educators require support as they move from classroom to higher education settings. This collaborative self-study provides insight into one such support space, a doctoral seminar titled Pedagogy of Teacher Education, and how our identities as educators and future teacher educators developed through participation in the course. Several important themes emerged as we negotiated and adopted new identities as educators, and future teacher educators and researchers. These themes include our development of a collaborative mindset, a teacher educator-researcher perspective, and a critical self-awareness. The findings draw on our professional and personal histories to explore the prominent features that influenced and shaped our identities as educators and future teacher educator-researchers. In sharing our development as educators and future teacher educators, this article provides insights into the ways in which doctoral students in education begin to develop their identities and pedagogies through guided support from more experienced teacher educators.


Studying Teacher Education | 2013

“What Do We Know about Elementary Social Studies?”: Novice Secondary Teacher Educators on Learning to Teach Elementary Social Studies Methods

Kimberly Logan; Brandon M. Butler

This collaborative self-study examines the critical friendship of two doctoral students charged with teaching a methods course in elementary social studies. The authors formed a critical friendship in Fall 2010, initiated by participation in a teacher educator community of practice that encouraged collaboration. With limited experience in elementary education, the authors created a space to investigate the limitations and opportunities in teaching a course outside their educational expertise. The result was a space of support in three forms: pedagogical, affective, and intellectual. Pedagogical support was provided through the process of curriculum development and the sharing of classroom strategies, affective support resulted from the validation of feelings related to status and time, and intellectual support allowed the authors to uncover personal philosophies for teaching elementary social studies and to analyze how program structures influenced their instruction. Findings suggest that novice teacher educators could benefit greatly from critical friendships that may help them become more reflective and better navigate the process of learning to teach teachers. In addition, the authors found that critical friendships can minimize the feelings of being an outsider and allow for collaborative insights into the inner workings of teacher education.


Studying Teacher Education | 2016

Re/Learning Student Teaching Supervision: A Co/Autoethnographic Self-Study.

Brandon M. Butler; Mark M. Diacopoulos

Abstract This article documents the critical friendship of an experienced teacher educator and a doctoral student through our joint exploration of student teaching supervision. By adopting a co/autoethnographic approach, we learned from biographical and contemporaneous critical incidents that informed short- and long-term practices. In particular, we learned about supervision from our experiences as student teachers, mentors, and university supervisors. We learned about supervision through experiences and insights as they occurred and from the relational dynamics provided by our critical friendship. We dissect critical moments that resulted in a series of key understandings. Autobiography informs practice: in sharing our biographies, we developed an understanding and vision for the type of supervision practice we wished to enact. Reflection and discussion inform practice: by journaling and discussing the supervision process, we reconsidered and acted upon practice. Finally, critical friends provide transformative insights into practice: we learned from each other through interaction and critique of past actions, current practices and future actions. Our collaboration was instrumental in providing a vision that defined our individual pedagogies of supervision. Consistent with other scholarship on the learning of student teacher supervision, this article promotes the provision of a support space for both novice and experienced supervisors to deconstruct and improve practice.


Studying Teacher Education | 2017

From Skepticism to Scholarship: Learning and Living Self-Study Research in a Doctoral Seminar

Kristen H. Gregory; Mark M. Diacopoulos; Angela Branyon; Brandon M. Butler

Abstract Teacher education doctoral seminars can provide a space for students to collaborate, reflect and support each other as they transition from teacher to teacher educator. These spaces also provide a forum for the learning of new research methodologies. This collaborative self-study chronicles how one group of doctoral students learned self-study research and fostered a scholarly identity in a doctoral seminar focused on learning about teacher education practices through self-study research. The participants shared autobiographies, journals, and critical summaries of assigned readings, and they questioned each other’s understanding and development in the context of their shared experiences. Through this process, they overcame concerns regarding self-study as they developed their understanding of the components of self-study research and accepted their new role as self-study researchers. This study provides insights into the benefits of using doctoral seminars as a space to develop a scholarly identity and for using that space as a source of investigation. Implications for similar communities are also discussed.


Theory and Research in Social Education | 2015

Knowledge Transmission versus Social Transformation: A Critical Analysis of Purpose in Elementary Social Studies Methods Textbooks.

Brandon M. Butler; Yonghee Suh; Wendy Scott

Abstract In this article, the authors investigate the extent to which 9 elementary social studies methods textbooks present the purpose of teaching and learning social studies. Using Stanley’s three perspectives of teaching social studies for knowledge transmission, method of intelligence, and social transformation; we analyze how these texts prepare preservice teachers to plan, instruct, and assess social studies in the elementary grades. Findings from this study suggest that social studies methods textbooks hold divergent perspectives for teaching social studies and that the purposes presented in the texts generally determine how social studies teaching and learning is presented in the remainder of the texts.


Theory and Research in Social Education | 2015

Exemplary Elementary Social Studies in an Age of Accountability

Mark M. Diacopoulos; Brandon M. Butler

Libresco, A. S., Alleman, J., Field, S. L., & Passe, J., (Eds.). (2014). Exemplary Elementary Social Studies: Case Studies in Practice. Charlotte, NC: Information Age. 164 pp.,


Archive | 2012

Idealizing and Localizing the Presidency

Scott L. Roberts; Brandon M. Butler

45.99, paperback, I...


Teaching and Teacher Education | 2011

Creating a “third space” in student teaching: Implications for the university supervisor’s status as outsider

Alexander Cuenca; Mardi Schmeichel; Brandon M. Butler; Todd Dinkelman; Joseph R. Nichols

For better or worse the president is the visible face of the United States of America and history is marked with many powerful presidential moments (e.g., Adler, 2005; Cronin, 1974, 2004; FitzGerald, 1979; Hoekstra, 1982; Kinder & Fiske, 1986; Loewen, 1995; Sanchez, 1996; Stern, 1996; Skowronek, 1993). Some of the most memorable include Abraham Lincoln and the Gettysburg Address, the inaugural addresses of Franklin D. Roosevelt and John F. Kennedy, and Ronald Reagan demanding Soviet premier Mikhail Gorbachev to “tear down this wall!” But history also presents us with presidential moments many would rather forget.


Action in teacher education | 2012

Conceptualizing the Roles of Mentor Teachers During Student Teaching

Brandon M. Butler; Alexander Cuenca

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