Understanding teacher learning in professional learning networks (PLNs): The emergence of lived learning experiences

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.62695/ZEZD6789

Keywords:

Knowledge, knowing, professional learning, PLNs, emergence

Abstract

This paper reveals the nature of teachers’ professional learning in online professional learning networks (PLNs) by narrating both my learning experiences and my understanding of the acquired theories (e.g., Gnosis, Episteme, Enactivism and Complexity Theory) from a seminar. The seminar made my learning experience the moments of wondering, discovering, struggling, and transforming, thereby resulting in my knowing about the acquired theories. These moments and the theories enabled me to reflect upon the conventional teacher professional learning and to explore the nature of teacher professional learning in PLNs such as knowledge, doing and being as a whole, learnable participatory position, emergence and understanding, true professional learning, and affordances of PLNs for teacher professional learning.

Author Biography

Xiong Wang, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada

Xiong Wang, PhD, is an Assistant Lecturer from the Department of Secondary Education, University of Alberta. Her research interests focus on teachers’ professional learning, online learning and assessment in mathematics education. Her current research project is about investigating the nature of the relatively new phenomena of mathematics teacher professional learning through social networks (e.g., Twitter and blogs) based on complexity thinking.

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Published

15-09-2021

How to Cite

Wang, X. (2021). Understanding teacher learning in professional learning networks (PLNs): The emergence of lived learning experiences. Malta Journal of Education, 2(1), 100–122. https://doi.org/10.62695/ZEZD6789