“…This process is part of teacher socialization, which includes experiences prior to teacher education, predispositions, preservice teacher education, and culture and workplace socialization, impacted by “pupils, the ecology of the classroom, colleagues, and institutional characteristics of schools” (Zeichner & Gore, 1989, p. 25). Teachers are influenced by different factors: personal identities and experiences beginning long before formal teacher education (Borg, 2004; Lortie, 1975), mentorship provided (or lack thereof) in their early years of teaching (Avalos, 2011; Flores, 2010), coursework in preservice teacher education programs (e.g., Darling-Hammond, 2010; Dobbs et al, 2022; López & Santibañez, 2018), disciplnary norms (Ippolito et al, 2017; Shanahan & Shanahan, 2012) and interactional factors between them and their practicum placement (Allen & Wright, 2014; Cohen et al, 2013). During the in-service years, teachers begin to engage in professional communities and organizations (Zeichner & Gore, 1990).…”