Messiah College
Messiah College: MOSAIC (Messiah's Open Scholarship And Intellectual Creativity)Not a member yet
7742 research outputs found
Sort by
“You Will Have a COVID Baby?!”: A Mama PhD Candidate’s Critical Incidents
In this article, I explore a disruptive shift to pandemic instruction in March 2020 and the challenges COVID-19 brought to my personal and professional lives. I use three autoethnographic vignettes, coupled with social media posts, to answer the following research question: How did the global pandemic affect my identity negotiation as a mama PhD candidate in physical and digital spaces and my choices as a novice teaching associate (TA)? As a methodological approach, this article employs the critical incident technique (Tripp) in investigating digital identity construction through autoethnographic writing (Hanauer). The findings show that the pandemic dramatically influenced my identities as a mama PhD Candidate and TA in physical and digital spaces. Self-reflections on my digital identity negotiation during the pandemic helped me understand students’ needs in terms of empathetic approaches to teaching, engaging students in personal types of writing, and providing spaces for students’ creativity and agency. Through reflexivity, I found meaning and accepted different experiences during the pandemic. The article concludes with the pedagogical implications of the benefits of autoethnographic writing.
Originally published in Journal of the Motherhood Initiative for Research and Community Involvement
Murray Library May 2025 Newsletter
Highlights include: Student Research Grant awarded Library receives grant for study pod
Representation of Communication Disorders in Children’s Literature
Children deserve to read books where they feel seen, heard and represented. In this study, the researcher rated children\u27s books with main characters with communication disorders. Based upon components of bibliotherapy, the researcher designed two rating instruments, one for rating chapter books with no illustrations, and one for rating picture books. Applying inclusion criteria, the researcher rated 60 books. Results discuss representation by types of communication disorders or disabilities, demographics such as gender, genre, and quality of representation according to the components of bibliotherapy. The researcher also identified gaps in the literature