Physical Review Physics Education Research (Jun 2023)

How women physics teacher candidates utilize their double outsider identities to productively learn physics

  • Johanna Larsson,
  • Anna T. Danielsson

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevPhysEducRes.19.010140
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 1
p. 010140

Abstract

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Underrepresentation of women in physics is a prominent issue in the western countries. Since physics teachers are in a unique position to affect new generations of students, it has been suggested that they are an important part of the solution. In this paper, we explore how trainee physics teachers create spaces for themselves as learners of physics while negotiating their positioning as women and trainee teachers. The empirical data consist of interviews with 17 trainee physics students, and the analysis focuses predominantly on the identity negotiations of three woman students. We find that the women simultaneously submit to and master a “physics nerd” discourse that connects physics with nerdiness, masculinity, and intelligence, which enables them to successfully create subject positions incorporating physics student, teacher-student, femininity, and constructive study practice. This is of particular importance to trainee physics teachers, who will be responsible for creating inclusive and productive physics learning environments for their students.