This paper explores the international learning experiences of Indonesian teachers participating in a Finnish master’s degree programme as an identity reconstruction process.
The authors study the participants’ experiences based on dialogical identity construction to explore the positioning and repositioning occurring during an international learning experience.
Given the conception of this experience as a boundary experience, repositioning is a way to create continuity and support the multiplicity of identity.
From the narrative analysis of the participants' stories about the programme, they found that the participants' repositioning during the programme involved negotiation with temporality, sociality and spatiality.
Throughout this process, the participants' understanding of their identities and practices evolved.
The post-conflict and post-disaster context in Aceh, Indonesia, manifests itself through a unique constellation of positionings and stimulates new understandings of its impact on teaching and learning processes.
This study contributes to understanding the international teacher programme as a repositioning process for teacher identity reconstruction that supports local meanings and has practical consequences.