Making Sense of Teaching in Difficult Times

Making Sense of Teaching in Difficult Times

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  • Author: Penny Jane Burke
  • Publisher: Routledge
  • ISBN: 1317290321
  • Category : Education
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 136

Thinking about teaching in educational terms has become increasingly difficult because of the conceptions of higher education that predominate in both policy and public debate. Framing the benefits of higher education simply as an economic good poses particular difficulties for making educational sense of teaching. Moreover, the assumptions about social mobility, usefulness, and the economic advantages of higher education, upon which these conceptions are based, can no longer be taken for granted. The chapters in this book all wrestle with understandings of education and teaching experiences in changing global, national, and institutional contexts. They explore questions of difference and privilege, the social transformation of teaching through transforming teachers, contestations of global citizenship and interculturality, learning and sensibilities of self-in-the-world, the relationship between programme content and student decision-making, divergent conceptions of learning in international education, and subject-centred approaches to embodied teaching. The book considers the value of disciplinary tools of analysis in addressing contextual challenges in developing societies, connections between pedagogies, autonomy and intercultural classrooms, and ways of countering the marketization of higher education through online teaching communities. This book was originally published as a special issue of Teaching in Higher Education.


The It Factor: What Makes a Teacher Great?

The It Factor: What Makes a Teacher Great?

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  • Author: Holly J. Thornton
  • Publisher: BRILL
  • ISBN: 900436448X
  • Category : Education
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 186

What makes teachers great? Teacher quality isn’t just content knowledge and pedagogical skills. The dispositions that educators have and act upon in the classroom can be the difference. What dispositions work best with learners and how can they be developed?


The Emergence of Mathematical Meaning

The Emergence of Mathematical Meaning

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  • Author: Paul Cobb
  • Publisher: Routledge
  • ISBN: 1136486100
  • Category : Education
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 313

This book grew out of a five-year collaboration between groups of American and German mathematics educators. The central issue addressed accounting for the messiness and complexity of mathematics learning and teaching as it occurs in classroom situations. The individual chapters are based on the view that psychological and sociological perspectives each tell half of a good story. To unify these concepts requires a combined approach that takes individual students' mathematical activity seriously while simultaneously seeing their activity as necessarily socially situated. Throughout their collaboration, the chapter authors shared a single set of video recordings and transcripts made in an American elementary classroom where instruction was generally compatible with recent reform recommendations. As a consequence, the book is much more than a compendium of loosely related papers. The combined approach taken by the authors draws on interactionism and ethnomethodology. Thus, it constitutes an alternative to Vygotskian and Soviet activity theory approaches. The specific topics discussed in individual chapters include small group collaboration and learning, the teacher's practice and growth, and language, discourse, and argumentation in the mathematics classroom. This collaborative effort is valuable to educators and psychologists interested in situated cognition and the relation between sociocultural processes and individual psychological processes.


Taking Literature and Language Learning Online

Taking Literature and Language Learning Online

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  • Author: Sandra Stadler-Heer
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing
  • ISBN: 1350268542
  • Category : Foreign Language Study
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 275

The use of literary texts in language classrooms is firmly established, but new questions arise with the transfer to remote teaching and learning. How do we teach literature online? How do learners react to being taught literature online? Will new genres emerge from the COVID-19 pandemic? Is the literary canon changing? This volume celebrates the vitality of literary and pedagogic responses to the pandemic and presents research into the phenomena observed in this evolving field. One strand of the book discusses literary outputs stimulated by the pandemic as well as past pandemics. Another strand looks at the pedagogy of engaging learners with literature online, examining learners of different ages and of different proficiency levels and different educational backgrounds, including teacher education. Finally, a third strand looks at the affordances of various technologies for teaching online and the way they interact with literature and with language learning. The contributions in this volume take literature teaching online away from static lecturing strategies, present numerous options for online teaching, and provide research-based grounding for the implementation of these pedagogies.


Teaching in Challenging Circumstances

Teaching in Challenging Circumstances

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  • Author: Chris Sowton
  • Publisher:
  • ISBN: 1108816169
  • Category : Language and languages
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 322

This book is an essential resource for teachers who work in challenging circumstances, which might include formal education systems in the developing or developed world and informal or non-formal teaching in areas with growing numbers of refugees or displaced people. It draws on academic and professional research to provide practical advice that will help teachers address concerns including teaching large classes, working with limited resources and supporting learners who have experienced interrupted education and who may be suffering from trauma. It offers suggestions for creating a positive learning environment and implementing effective teaching practice, and discusses the importance of resilience and wellbeing. Each chapter contains key takeaways, relevant case studies and classroom-ready teaching tips and the book also includes opportunities for teachers to reflect on their own knowledge and experience and develop their resilience and ability.


Biography-Driven Culturally Responsive Teaching

Biography-Driven Culturally Responsive Teaching

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  • Author: Socorro G. Herrera
  • Publisher: Teachers College Press
  • ISBN: 0807757500
  • Category : Education
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 209

Teaching strategies and tools have been updated to reflect new brain research and to keep pace with our nation’s ever-changing demographics and constant shift in expectations for K–12 students. The structure and format of this bestseller has also been revised to help educators find information quickly.


Making Sense of Teaching

Making Sense of Teaching

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  • Author: Sally A. Brown
  • Publisher:
  • ISBN:
  • Category : Education
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 152

This text examines the nature of teaching in schools from the teachers' perspective. The authors access teachers' professional craft knowledge and facilitate their own articulation of the ordinary teaching which they do routinely and spontaneously.


Reform and Relevance in Schooling

Reform and Relevance in Schooling

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  • Author: Derek John Allison
  • Publisher: OISE Press
  • ISBN: 9780774403603
  • Category : Dropout behavior, Prediction of
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 148


Making Numbers Make Sense

Making Numbers Make Sense

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  • Author: Ron Ritchhart
  • Publisher: Addison-Wesley Longman
  • ISBN:
  • Category : Arithmetic
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 178

This extensive collection of hands-on activities helps students develop their number sense and basic mathematical comprehension. Lessons in place value, statistics, measurement, and estimation all adhere to the NCTM standards for teaching math.


Imagine No Child Left Invisible

Imagine No Child Left Invisible

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  • Author: Shelja Sen
  • Publisher: HarperCollins
  • ISBN: 9352773276
  • Category : Self-Help
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 272

Why do we send our children to school? How can learning be meaningful? And most importantly, how can we build schools worthy of our children? From the time children are little, we start making stories about them. Schools are like factories where these stories are manufactured all the time. Some children, who're at the top of the social hierarchy, enjoy rich, diverse and colourful stories, which are told and retold. But there are many who spend most of their lives in school, clutching on to single, thin narratives where they've been judged as: 'a failure', 'can do better', 'not up to the mark' or 'not reaching potential' - every 'not' restricting and making their narratives thinner, limited, with lesser scope for possibilities. These are the children who are forgotten, who are invisible and who are seen as never being good enough. At the core of this book is a deep faith that learning is about the magical relationship the teacher builds with each child; it is about building emotionally safe, inclusive spaces for creative learning - this is the heart, the lifeblood, the bare bones of learning. Imagine is a call to action for teachers, parents, counsellors, therapists, activists, thought leaders and other change agents in our society. It is a game changer that will force us to reflect, rethink and redesign schools to ones that our children truly deserve.