Identity formation: An auto-ethnography of indonesian student becomes a legitimate speaker and teacher of english

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Abstract

Several studies have investigated how the TESOL program influenced the construction of Non-Native English Speaker Teachers’ identities, yet few literature concerns about the negotiation of NNESTs’ identity as legitimate speakers and teachers of English. This paper was an auto-ethnographic investigation of my personal experience as one of international students in the TESOL program at an Australian university. Drawing on Norton’s theory of language and identity, this study examined a complex process of my identity formation as a legitimate speaker and teacher of English after studying one of a critical pedagogical unit ‘Language, Culture, and Curriculum’. The findings revealed that the TESOL program enabled me to discover and explore another part of myself as a legitimate speaker and teacher of English through linguistic constructs and rich knowledge given in that unit. It also supported that a critical pedagogical unit could empower international students to form their identities as confident and professional English teachers back to their countries.

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APA

Sarie, R. F., Pratolo, B. W., & Purwanti, E. (2020). Identity formation: An auto-ethnography of indonesian student becomes a legitimate speaker and teacher of english. International Journal of Evaluation and Research in Education, 9(3), 691–696. https://doi.org/10.11591/ijere.v9i3.20399

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