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Research Article

Curricular Contradictions: Negotiating Between Pursuing National Board Certification and an Urban District’s Direct Instruction Mandate

TRAVIS J. BRISTOL and JOY ESBOLDT
Harvard Educational Review September 2020, 90 (3) 474-496; DOI: https://doi.org/10.17763/1943-5045-90.3.474
TRAVIS J. BRISTOL
University of California, Berkeley
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JOY ESBOLDT
University of California, Berkeley
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Abstract

In this article, Travis J. Bristol and Joy Esboldt examine the supports and constraints teachers at one midsized urban school serving predominately Latinx students encountered during school-based professional development aligned with becoming a National Board Certified Teacher (NBCT). Research has established that Black and Latinx students have less access to NBCTs when compared to White students, yet few studies offer insight into the organizational conditions that influence urban school teachers’ capacity to earn certification. Drawing on two years of ethnographic observations, interviews, and artifact analysis, this study finds that district and school-based factors constrained teachers’ capacity to earn National Board Certification, reporting that participants believed there was a misalignment between the district’s vision for instructional improvement, which focused on Direct Instruction, and the National Board for Professional Teaching Standards.

  • professional development
  • National Board Certification
  • Direct Instruction
  • teacher practices
  • urban schools
  • Copyright © by the President and Fellows of Harvard College
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Harvard Educational Review
Vol. 90, Issue 3
21 Sep 2020
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Curricular Contradictions: Negotiating Between Pursuing National Board Certification and an Urban District’s Direct Instruction Mandate
TRAVIS J. BRISTOL, JOY ESBOLDT
Harvard Educational Review Sep 2020, 90 (3) 474-496; DOI: 10.17763/1943-5045-90.3.474

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Curricular Contradictions: Negotiating Between Pursuing National Board Certification and an Urban District’s Direct Instruction Mandate
TRAVIS J. BRISTOL, JOY ESBOLDT
Harvard Educational Review Sep 2020, 90 (3) 474-496; DOI: 10.17763/1943-5045-90.3.474
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Keywords

  • professional development
  • National Board Certification
  • Direct Instruction
  • teacher practices
  • urban schools
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