The Persona Doll Project describes an experiential intervention with undergraduate preservice teachers designed to increase awareness about diversity and apply this awareness to curriculum planning and advocacy for children. Sixty-three undergraduate students in a social studies methods class were each assigned a persona doll for the semester whose background differed from their own. Each was charged with becoming the advocate for the child, represented by the doll, by telling informed stories that would help other students better understand a level of diversity beyond what they knew from their own lives. Students heightened awareness of their own assumptions through narrative, inquiry and reflection and used that knowledge to critically analyze teaching practices that promote inclusion or exclusion. Students reported increased confidence for working in diverse communities. One goal of teacher education programs is to prepare teachers to work with students from racial/cultural/linguistic backgrounds other than their own. This article provides one example of how to address this important goal.
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1 July 2011
Research Article|
July 01 2011
The Persona Doll Project: Promoting Diversity Awareness Among Preservice Teachers Through Storytelling Available to Purchase
Mary Ellin Logue;
Mary Ellin Logue
*
1
V. Susan Bennett-Armistead
*Corresponding author: Mary Ellin Logue, College of Education and Human Development 112 Merrill Hall, University of Maine, Orono, ME 04469 (207) 581-2726 mary.logue@umit.maine.edu
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SooJoung Kim
SooJoung Kim
2
University of Maine
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*Corresponding author: Mary Ellin Logue, College of Education and Human Development 112 Merrill Hall, University of Maine, Orono, ME 04469 (207) 581-2726 mary.logue@umit.maine.edu
Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Emerald Publishing Limited
2011
Social Studies Research and Practice (2011) 6 (2): 60–80.
Citation
Logue ME, Kim S (2011), "The Persona Doll Project: Promoting Diversity Awareness Among Preservice Teachers Through Storytelling". Social Studies Research and Practice, Vol. 6 No. 2 pp. 60–80, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/SSRP-02-2011-B0006
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