Heather Coffey
University of North Carolina at Charlotte
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Featured researches published by Heather Coffey.
Action in teacher education | 2015
Heather Coffey; Paul G. Fitchett; Abiola A. Farinde
Through course readings, museum visits, focus group discussions, and reflections on clinical observation experiences, preservice teachers developed a fictitious educational setting (Courage High School) that incorporates critical, social justice practices and privileges the experiences and cultural backgrounds of all K-12 students. Participants presented a model for this school and how it would benefit specific student needs. From our classroom experiences, the authors developed recommendations for how future educators problematized ideas of courage, race, and diversity in developing Courage High School. The authors suggest that using museums as experiential pedagogical tools and offering authentic learning opportunities can encourage a critical, social justice orientation to teaching and may inspire future teachers to enact courage in their teaching practice.
Urban Education | 2018
Bettie Ray Butler; Heather Coffey; Jemimah Lee Young
The effects of professional teacher dispositions on student development have been widely documented. Yet there is limited discussion of the impact of socially just dispositions. The present study critically examines the relationship between justice-oriented mind-sets in preservice teachers and their perceptions of teaching in urban schools. Using critical interpretive case study, we analyze a series of journal reflections from a diverse group of prospective teachers to determine whether exposure to service-learning opportunities within an urban school influenced their views about urban schools and students. As a result of the findings from the study, recommendations for teacher education are addressed.
Action in teacher education | 2018
Paul G. Fitchett; Elena Tosky King; Tom Fisher; Heather Coffey; Susan B. Harden
ABSTRACT Drawing on a theory of program coherence, the establishment of an educational third space, and intentional clinical experience, the authors created a unique entry point in a teacher education program. The authors developed the Onsite Secondary Education Project (OSSEP) to connect relevant educational theory and discipline-specific pedagogy through intentional clinical placements for first-semester preservice teachers. Results from this exploratory research demonstrate that program coherence and structured clinical experiences can help preservice teachers orient themselves to the teaching profession and connect educational theory and practice. However, unintentional experiences were identified, suggesting that increased exposure to the classroom helped shape participants’ views toward the teaching profession. Findings offer evidence of a teacher education that balances the idealism of teacher education with the practicalities of the PK-12 classroom.
Teaching and Teacher Education | 2010
Heather Coffey
Teaching and Teacher Education | 2016
Heather Coffey; Abiola Farinde-Wu
Archive | 2017
Erik Jon Byker; Heather Coffey; Susan B. Harden; Amy J. Good; Katie E. Brown
Archive | 2018
Heather Coffey; Susan B. Harden; Erik Jon Byker; Amy J. Good; Larry B. Fisher
Archive | 2018
Heather Coffey; Susan B. Harden
Archive | 2017
Heather Coffey; Susan B. Harden; Katie E. Brown; Michael Williams
Journal of Inquiry and Action in Education | 2017
Erik Jon Byker; Heather Coffey; Susan B. Harden; Amy J. Good; Tina L. Heafner; Kathrine Brown; Debra Holzberg