Guest Lectures

Aydarova, E. (2024). Case study methodology. Guest speaker for TLPL860 Seminar on Case Study Methods, University of Maryland.

Aydarova, E. (2023). Multi-sited ethnography of Russian teacher education reform. Guest lecture for TSS 598: Ethnography of Schooling in the Borderlands, Arizona State University.

Aydarova, E. (2021). Ethnography as a journey. Guest lecture for CI5390 Introduction to Education Research, Texas State University.

Aydarova, E. (2021). Working with texts. Guest lecture for CEP930 Introduction to Qualitative Methods in Educational Research, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan.

Aydarova, E. (2020). Transformations in teaching and teacher education in (post)socialist contexts. Guest lecture for CTL1037 Teacher Development: Comparative and Cross-Cultural Perspectives, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada.

Aydarova, E. (2017). Educational reforms in post-socialist contexts. Guest lecture for EPA 691 Introduction to Comparative Perspectives in Education, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona.

Aydarova, O. (2016). Comparative education and research in post-socialist contexts. Guest lecture for EPA 691 Introduction to Comparative Perspectives in Education, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona.

Aydarova, O. (2016). Globalization and education. Guest lecture for ENG 606 Advanced Studies in English Education: Youth, Identity, and Education in a Global Context, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona.

Aydarova, O. (2015). Teacher education reform as political theater. Guest panelist for TE923 Comparative Perspectives on Curriculum, Instruction, and Teacher Education, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan.

Aydarova, O. (2014). Challenges and contradictions of conducting ethnographic fieldwork in a post-socialist context. Guest speaker for TE939 Alternative methodologies for conducting ‘difficult’ research, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan.

Aydarova, O. (2004). Ukraine: A Sociolinguistic Portrait. Guest speaker for LING540 Languages and Nationalism, University of South Carolina, Columbia, South Carolina.