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The purpose of this volume is to contribute to educational research by presenting comprehensive and nuanced understandings of intersectional perspectives
Edited by Terri D. Pigott, Ann Marie Ryan, and Charles Tocci, the purpose of this volume is to present high-quality reviews that examine change to teaching practice from a variety of perspectives and a range of disciplines with an eye toward the enormous scope of the field. Taken as a whole, this volume presents a compelling profile of the core challenges and opportunities facing those engaged in the work of changing teaching practice and those who research these efforts. Divided into four sections, the first section of this volume delves into the history and policy of changing teaching practice, the second set of chapters consider the capacity of teachers to make changes, the third set of chapters review literature examining how to change practice in numerous settings in various ways, and the final section of the volume centers on emerging issues for practice. This volume considers some of the most critical problems facing educators and scholars today: how our history shapes our present-day possibilities, how we develop the capacity of educators to change and improve practice, the innumerable aspects that can be changed, which dimensions of teaching should we prioritize, and what emerging issues will shape this work in the coming years?
Digs into salient research that examines learning contexts within critical literacy, scientific literacy, and teacher education. This title highlights the importance of leveraging research to explore ways in which education institutions can structure positive learning environments for diverse students.
Review of Research in Education (Volume 38) explores the important role of educational language policies in promoting education as a human right.
Presents research that explores the varied intersections between Education, Democracy, and the Public Good. This book gives readers a broader perspective on how the three constructs are interconnected and applied in the United States and in other countries around the world.
Explores the pedagogies that teachers and educators have developed in recent years to address the needs of nondominant students and families served by public schools and institutions of higher learning.
Provides multiple interpretations of how changing views of knowledge across educational contexts that shape curricular decisions, learning opportunities, and theories of teaching. It includes chapters that situate various interpretations of knowledge in historical, political, and policy contexts and examine the relevance of these interpretations.
How are we to respond to the educational challenges of this new millennium? And how can research and theory constructively and critically engage with the demands and imperatives of government educational and social policies? This book provides answers to these questions.
Learn More About the Volume Edited by Patricia Alexander (University of Maryland), Felice J. Levine (AERA), and William Tate (Washington University in St. Louis), this centennial volume of RRE takes a “retrospective, prospective” approach on a diverse range of education research topics spanning the last 100 years. While using historical trends as foundations for their chapters, the authors also look ahead to the most challenging issues and promising directions for the next century. The chapters contribute to cumulative knowledge, capture research developments and findings of sustained significance, and address research innovations anchored in their time or place, which could ultimately shape directions of scholarly promise and potential for the future. To bring conceptual cohesion to the volume, the editors nested the chapters in four thematic sections: (1) the Research Enterprise and the Doing of Education Research, (2) the Contexts of Education, (3) the Process of and Substance of Learning, (4) and the Changing Attention to Diversity and Difference.
Drawing upon international research, Review of Research in Education, Volume 35 examines the interplay between youth cultures and educational practices. Although the articles describe youth practices across a range of settings, a central theme is how gender, class, race, and national identity mediate both adult perceptions of youth and youths' experiences of schooling.
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