Repositioning feminism and education : perspectives on educating for social change
著者
書誌事項
Repositioning feminism and education : perspectives on educating for social change
(Critical studies in education and culture series)
Bergin & Garvey, 1995
- : alk. paper
- : pbk. : alk. paper
- タイトル別名
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Repositioning feminism & education
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注記
Includes bibliographical references (p. [247]-256) and index
内容説明・目次
- 巻冊次
-
: alk. paper ISBN 9780897894364
内容説明
This book presents testimony of feminisms in process. The accounts are filled with tensions, not least an uneasiness with feminism itself, and the question of what exactly it means to be a feminist in education in the contemporary world. It is their respect for their own differences and the honesty with which they write that makes this such a rich text. From the Foreword by Kathleen Weiler
Educators committed to social change face the common dilemma of how to take up the work of transformation without reinscribing systems of domination. The struggle with the concept of imposition is central to the emergence of many educators' identities and provides a site for exploring the complex relationship between power, knowledge, and teacher identity. This book chronicles the collaborative efforts of five diverse women educators (Native American, European, Jewish American, rural, midwestern, working class) to grapple with the tensions of taking up a political position while honoring the cultural, social, and historical context of others. Their dialogue across feminist, critical, and postmodern theories and practices explores the process of fusing theory with political work in the world. What emerges is the continual repositioning and disruption of taken for granted meanings as central to enhancing emancipatory education.
目次
Series Foreword by Henry A. Giroux Foreword by Kathleen Weiler Acknowledgments Preface Introduction The Location of Politics Teacher/Mother: An Imposition of Identity by Janice Jipson Becoming the Good Mother: The Emergent Curriculum of Adolescent Mothers by Susan Victor Multi-Cultural Curriculum Development in a Multiple-Cultural Context by Karen Froude-Jones Here I Go Again: Supervision, Defining a Cultural Role Gretchen Freed-Rowland Speculations: Constructing a Feminist Supervision Identity by Petra Munro Appreciating Dissonance: Multiple Perspectives on Collaboration Getting Lost Multiple "Is": Dilemmas of Life History Research by Petra Munro Is Collaborative Research Collaborative?: Life History, Whose Life? by Karen Froude-Jones "I Felt Like We Were Rats or Something:" The Problem of Imposition in Participatory Research by Susan Victor Research as Autobiography: Imposition/Life by Janice Jipson Words! Words! Words! by Gretchen Freed-Rowland Reconstructing Reality: Deconstructing the Collaborative Process Epilogue Index
- 巻冊次
-
: pbk. : alk. paper ISBN 9780897894371
内容説明
This book presents testimony of feminisms in process. The accounts are filled with tensions, not least an uneasiness with feminism itself, and the question of what exactly it means to be a feminist in education in the contemporary world. It is their respect for their own differences and the honesty with which they write that makes this such a rich text. From the Foreword by Kathleen Weiler
Educators committed to social change face the common dilemma of how to take up the work of transformation without reinscribing systems of domination. The struggle with the concept of imposition is central to the emergence of many educators' identities and provides a site for exploring the complex relationship between power, knowledge, and teacher identity. This book chronicles the collaborative efforts of five diverse women educators (Native American, European, Jewish American, rural, midwestern, working class) to grapple with the tensions of taking up a political position while honoring the cultural, social, and historical context of others. Their dialogue across feminist, critical, and postmodern theories and practices explores the process of fusing theory with political work in the world. What emerges is the continual repositioning and disruption of taken for granted meanings as central to enhancing emancipatory education.
目次
Series Foreword by Henry A. Giroux
Foreword by Kathleen Weiler
Acknowledgments
Preface
Introduction
The Location of Politics
Teacher/Mother: An Imposition of Identity by Janice Jipson
Becoming the Good Mother: The Emergent Curriculum of Adolescent Mothers by Susan Victor
Multi-Cultural Curriculum Development in a Multiple-Cultural Context by Karen Froude-Jones
Here I Go Again: Supervision, Defining a Cultural Role Gretchen Freed-Rowland
Speculations: Constructing a Feminist Supervision Identity by Petra Munro
Appreciating Dissonance: Multiple Perspectives on Collaboration
Getting Lost
Multiple "Is": Dilemmas of Life History Research by Petra Munro
Is Collaborative Research Collaborative?: Life History, Whose Life? by Karen Froude-Jones
"I Felt Like We Were Rats or Something:" The Problem of Imposition in Participatory Research by Susan Victor
Research as Autobiography: Imposition/Life by Janice Jipson
Words! Words! Words! by Gretchen Freed-Rowland
Reconstructing Reality: Deconstructing the Collaborative Process
Epilogue
Index
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