Plantation Pedagogy
A Postcolonial and Global Perspective
©2012
Textbook
VII,
205 Pages
Series:
Global Studies in Education, Volume 16
Summary
Plantation Pedagogy originates from an Afro-Caribbean primary school teacher’s experience. It provides a discourse which extends and illuminates the limitations of current neo-liberal and global rationalizations of the challenges posed to a teacher’s practice. Plantation pedagogy is distinguished from critical pedagogy by its historical presence and its double-faced manifestations as simultaneously oppressive and subversive. Plantation pedagogy privileges and relocates educational transformation within the cultural arena, so that culture and history become the vehicles for teaching, educational research, and social transformation. It returns the work of education to the community; promotes an interconnection among the personal stories of the teacher, the historical narratives and memories of the community of teaching, and the professional advocacy of the teaching community; and advances an incomplete decolonization project of public political education.
Details
- Pages
- VII, 205
- Publication Year
- 2012
- ISBN (Hardcover)
- 9781433119736
- ISBN (Softcover)
- 9781433117152
- Language
- English
- Keywords
- educational transformation culture history
- Published
- New York, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt am Main, Oxford, Wien, 2012. VIII, 205 pp., num. ill.
- Product Safety
- Peter Lang Group AG