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Negotiating the Curriculum
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 310

Negotiating the Curriculum

The authors of this book present an ongoing conversation about the theory and practice of curriculum negotiation in the classroom.

Personal Empowerment
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 188

Personal Empowerment

Diversity issues in the workplace can reduce productivity for the team and create challenges for managers. In this ground-breaking work, authors Bennie L. Crane and Dr. Julian Williams explain in a straightforward and commonsense manner how to strengthen organizations by empowering individuals. Crane uses his years as a Chicago firefighter and facilitator for examples in a method that is applicable to teams and organizations in any work environment. Contents: Let the Healing Begin Personal Agenda: Now More Than Ever The Human Endowments Empowerment Vs Entrapment Tradegy of the Age Empersonal Communications &Ten 7-Ton Elephants Standing in a Row Human Behavior Conflict Resolution Communications Model Behavior/Attitude/Value Model Winners Vs Losers Effective Leadership The Million-Man March Conclusion Appendix A-Personal Motivational Workbook.

Languaging Experiences
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 262

Languaging Experiences

This book is dedicated to the notion of languaging, which has recently gained recognition across many disciplines. From philosophy to linguistics, the foundations of the concept rest on the assumption that language is a way of knowing, making personal sense of the world, becoming conscious of oneself, and a means of creating one's identity. The very notion of languaging is still a fresh and unexplored concept in applied linguistics and deserves careful scrutiny. For this reason, the volume is ...

Moving Teacher Education into Urban Schools and Communities
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 258

Moving Teacher Education into Urban Schools and Communities

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2013-05-07
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  • Publisher: Routledge

Winner of the 2013 American Educational Studies Association's Critics Choice Award! When teacher education is located on a university campus, set apart from urban schools and communities, it is easy to overlook the realities and challenges communities face as they struggle toward social, economic, cultural, and racial justice. This book describes how teacher education can become a meaningful part of this work, by re-positioning programs directly into urban schools and communities. Situating their work within the theoretical framework of prioritizing community strengths, each set of authors provides a detailed and nuanced description of a teacher education program re-positioned within an urba...

Teaching the Best Practice Way
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 360

Teaching the Best Practice Way

Everyone talks about "best practice" teaching--but what does it actually look like in the classroom? How do working teachers translate complex curriculum standards into simple, workable classroom structures that embody exemplary instruction--and still let kids find joy in learning?In Teaching the Best Practice Way, Harvey Daniels and Marilyn Bizar present seven basic teaching structures that make classrooms more active, experiential, collaborative, democratic, and cognitive, while simultaneously meeting "best practice" standards across subject areas and throughout the grades. Each section begins with an essay outlining one key method, providing its historical background and research results,...

Let’s Flip the Script
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 148

Let’s Flip the Script

An inspiring collection of personal essays about education, literacy, and freedom.

Music, Education, and Religion
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 299

Music, Education, and Religion

Music, Education, and Religion: Intersections and Entanglements explores the critical role that religion can play in formal and informal music education. As in broader educational studies, research in music education has tended to sidestep the religious dimensions of teaching and learning, often reflecting common assumptions of secularity in contemporary schooling in many parts of the world. This book considers the ways in which the forces of religion and belief construct and complicate the values and practices of music education—including teacher education, curriculum texts, and teaching repertoires. The contributors to this volume embrace a range of perspectives from a variety of disciplines, examining religious, agnostic, skeptical, and atheistic points of view. Music, Education, and Religion is a valuable resource for all music teachers and scholars in related fields, interrogating the sociocultural and epistemological underpinnings of music repertoires and global educational practices.

Teaching Teachers
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 248

Teaching Teachers

Teacher education in America has changed dramatically in the past thirty years—with major implications for how our kids are taught. As recently as 1990, if a person wanted to become a public school teacher in the United States, he or she needed to attend an accredited university education program. Less than three decades later, the variety of routes into teaching is staggering. In Teaching Teachers, education historians James W. Fraser and Lauren Lefty look at these alternative programs through the lens of the past. Fraser and Lefty explain how, beginning in 1986, an extraordinary range of new teaching programs emerged, most of which moved teacher education out of universities. In some sch...

Redefining Staff Development
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 200

Redefining Staff Development

In Redefining Staff Development, Robb advocates for meaningful change-change that takes into account the culture of the school community and the diversity among its members.

Schooling Teachers
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 225

Schooling Teachers

"This book moves beyond the purported dichotomy between university-based teacher education and alternatives such as Teach For America to consider their common challenges and suggest a starting place from which to imagine a future of more effective teacher preparation. In focusing on the experiences of the first Teach For America cohort between 1990-1992, the book anchors its analysis in a particular historical moment, allowing a significant accounting of a pivotal time in [teacher] education as well as thoughtful consideration of both change and continuity in how teachers have been prepared and entered the classroom over the decades since. Through its use of oral history testimonies, Schooling Teachers offers important stories about individuals' personal experiences and actions, but also reveals the broader collective and social forces that shaped and gave meaning to those experiences. Richly detailed qualitative data, in the form of oral history, enables the authors to draw from the specific narratives some general insights that speak to the larger issues of staffing and supporting urban schools"--