“…To illustrate, qualitative research is essentially a process of discovery and learning, and it requires researchers to immerse themselves in an ongoing process of data collection and interpretation to discover how people think, believe, and behave in specific time and space (Creswell, 2007). Considering that research on language teacher educators is an emergent area, qualitative approaches, including case study (e.g., Asaba, 2018; Yuan & Yang, 2020a) and narrative inquiry (e.g., Yuan, 2017a; Barkhuizen, 2021b), allow the researchers to march into this unchartered territory, investigating language teacher educators’ cognition (e.g., Banegas, 2020a), collaboration (e.g., Yuan & Mak, 2016), and identities (e.g., Trent, 2013) with an open and exploratory lens. More pointedly, compared with the survey-based quantitative studies, which depict general patterns of language teachers’ perceptions, the utilization of qualitative research data (e.g., interviews and field observation) shows sensitivity and respect towards the personalized, situated meanings constructed by language teacher educators through their social engagement and interactions in particular socio-cultural environments.…”