This study used an online-structured interview methodology to examine the impact of an intensive field experience in facilitating problem (PBL) and project-based learning (PjBL) on teachers' pedagogy. The purpose of the study was to determine to what extent the field experience had transformed their teaching. Data were collected in the form of online interviews with 36 participants who completed the gifted education licensure program at a regional state university in the southeast. The online interviews were followed up with telephone interviews with four of the participants. The resulting themes can be grouped under the major categories of teacher-related and student-related themes. This article will focus on the teacherrelated themes, the most important being the change in the teachers' pedagogy. The article will further discuss the obstacles that stood in the way of the teachers' successful implementation of PBL and PjBL.
Our knowledge is extremely limited regarding the educational experiences of students who are gifted with learning disabilities, and there has been no research on how these dual exceptionalities affect identity formation. To address this gap, qualitative narrative inquiry was used to explore identity formation in 4 college students who are gifted with learning disabilities. The themes that resulted from the analysis of the narratives fell under 2 categories: (a) contextual and (b) personal. Under the contextual category, 2 themes emerged in the data analysis as being integral to the identity formation of the participants: support systems in the way of family, teachers, mentors, and friends and involvement in extracurricular activities, volunteer work, and jobs. The life stories suggested 4 personal themes in identity formation: self-knowledge, self-acceptance, self-advocacy, and self-determination. Educational and psychological implications are discussed and recommendations suggested for further research.
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