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Böcker i Transgressions: Cultural Studies and Education-serien

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  • - An Introduction
    av Tony Monchinski
    676,-

    The subject of education is a contentious issue in our world. The Politics of Education: An Introduction, critically examines the overt and covert political issues suffusing education. Questions of What is education?, What do we teach?, and How do we teach? are all political questions, the answers to which empower certain individuals, groups and viewpoints over others. This book explores the political contexts that shape our conceptions of education and guides our pedagogical practice. Contemporary educational theory and practice are taken to task for attempting to instill democratic values and a love of freedom anti-democratically with little to no freedom. For example, The Politics of Education considers the effects of standardized examinations on the individual and her ability to function in a democratic society. Critiques of contemporary educational theory and practice by Dewey, Foucault, Bourdeau, classical conservative thinkers and others are considered. This book examines education through historical and international lenses where appropriate. Alternative meanings and modes of education grounded in critical pedagogy are offered as steps in revolutionizing education.

  • - Critique and Spirituality in Sociology of Education
    av Philip Wexler
    676,-

  •  
    526,-

    Excerpts from the final chapter: "A Conversation Amongst the Authors," developed as an online discussion about the process and importance of writing for this book. Authors are identified with the title of their corresponding book chapter from this volume: Wow, FINALLY, a text that will address the emotional and personal struggles - and victories - of teaching a critical pedagogy!...Gaining and sharing insights to the real personal and emotional struggles critical pedagogues feel while engaging in critical teaching is crucial if we want to survive in the academy where academic freedom and promotion and tenure may be at risk simply due to one's ideological position. Priya Parmar: "The 'Dangers' of teaching a critical pedagogy" I had a class I taught in the fall ("Diversity in Human Relations") read my piece for this book. It was a risk. Some people thought I was insane to stand in front of a class of students who had just read about these deeply personal, deeply painful experiences of mine. But I thought it was pedagogically important to do so. I ask my students every day to push themselves, take risks, ask questions, and expose themselves. If I'm not prepared to do so myself, then how dare I expect them to? Liz Meyer: "I am (not) a feminist: Unplugging from the Heterosexual Matrix" Through my classroom research and teaching of pre-service teachers, I've become increasingly convinced that individual's belief systems and school ideologies inform/influence/construct/create discriminatory practices in schools. I think that intellectual and scholarly rigor and/or critical action are important but I also think that unless people connect their feelings to their thoughts and actions, their ideologies go untroubled and real change can't occur. Andrea Sterzuk: "From Buffalo Plains to Wheat Fields: Critical thinking in the Canadian praires" The problem is, it [the affective] is not important- or, it has not been important enough. It is too easy to deny the relevance of me, my life, my history, my being in the context of academia. Carmen Lavoie: "Activism where I stand: Moving beyond words in graduate education" To me, critical self-reflection is about accepting that self-understanding and social change go hand in hand (Pinar, 2004); it's about going beyond understanding criticality - it's about living it. And once you start reflecting on yourself critically - and I hope I'm starting to - you might be surprised at the layers of deception that you uncover in yourself. Oh yeah, humility is required. But only then can you start to be more understanding, rather than simply critical, of the duplicity found in others. Sandra Chang-Kredl: "'My Future Self N' Me:' Currere and childhood fiction in education" In a faculty of education we often ask undergraduate and graduate students to undergo the type of critical self reflection that comes out in Rocking Your World.... We extol the benefits of critically reflecting to undergraduates because we are adamant it will help them become better teachers, but where is the same push at the university level of teaching? Eloise Tan: "Critical Pedagogy and the great white hope dilemma" Through my research I have come to a deeper appreciation of the importance of story and its undeniable connection to place. I believe this is a framework in which we can begin to understand the confusing and emotional questions of ethnicity and identity. "Our story", each person's lived experience, is the basis on which a person's identity is formed and creates the lens through which the world is seen. Kevin O&a

  • av Shirley Wade McLoughlin
    676,-

  •  
    1 446,-

    Productive Remembering and Social Agency examines how memory can be understood, used and interpreted in forward-looking directions in education to support agency and social change. The edited collection features contributions from established and new scholars who take up the idea of productive remembering across diverse contexts, positioning the work at the cutting edge of research and practice.

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