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  • Higher Education and Civic Democratic Engagement

    Exploring Impact

    How might we interrogate and reimagine the impact of civic, democratic engagement across higher education? This series invites narratives and new studies that critically and creatively explore the possibilities and limitations of civic, democratic engagement within higher education. The editors seek to gather inclusive, imaginary, transdisciplinary scholarship exploring the impact of next generation civic, democratic engagement from a diverse range of voices. Among others, we hope these voices will include international and indigenous perspectives, members from a diverse array of communities, researchers from across disciplines, teacher-scholars, practitioners and activists, undergraduate and graduate students, politicians, businesses, and different forms of administration. The editors invite proposals that critically examine historical, cultural, and structural dimensions of impact while exploring innovative strategies for disrupting and recreating more inclusive, liberatory, and plural forms of civic democratic engagement. The editors welcome and encourage a wide-range of formats including, but not limited to, narrative studies, ethnographies, mixed method studies, case studies, socio-cultural and/or historical analyses, theoretical treatises from multiple theoretical lens as well as reports and toolkits that support efforts to examine the impact of civic democratic engagement. For inquiries on submitting a proposal should contact the Series Editors Barry Kanpol (Kanpolb@gvsu.edu) & Danielle Lake (lakeda@gvsu.edu) with a brief overview of their project, and explanation of how it fits the series, and a current CV.

    1 publications

  • Inclusion and Teacher Education

    Historically, inclusive education developed as a reaction to the exclusion of students of minoritized identity groups marked by race, language, sexual orientation, disability, etc. Our position in this series is that inclusion can and should be more. It can be understood as embracing and planning for difference, building relationships across difference, teaching and learning that acknowledges and supports difference while also minimizing the use of identity categories as the foundation for arguments about inclusion. In other words, the silos of educational discourse based on identity categories need to be broken down, little by little, to reconceptualize inclusion as just, compassionate, and creative ways of living, teaching, and learning in a complex and diverse world. Inclusive teaching depends on deeply respectful relationships between teachers, students, and community members. Books in the series must make clear connections between theory and practice. Both are necessary ingredients for inclusion. This series will help teacher educators prepare teachers to be knowledgeable and skillful in teaching all students, regardless of their differences. Historically, inclusive education developed as a reaction to the exclusion of students of minoritized identity groups marked by race, language, sexual orientation, disability, etc. Our position in this series is that inclusion can and should be more. It can be understood as embracing and planning for difference, building relationships across difference, teaching and learning that acknowledges and supports difference while also minimizing the use of identity categories as the foundation for arguments about inclusion. In other words, the silos of educational discourse based on identity categories need to be broken down, little by little, to reconceptualize inclusion as just, compassionate, and creative ways of living, teaching, and learning in a complex and diverse world. Inclusive teaching depends on deeply respectful relationships between teachers, students, and community members. Books in the series must make clear connections between theory and practice. Both are necessary ingredients for inclusion. This series will help teacher educators prepare teachers to be knowledgeable and skillful in teaching all students, regardless of their differences. Historically, inclusive education developed as a reaction to the exclusion of students of minoritized identity groups marked by race, language, sexual orientation, disability, etc. Our position in this series is that inclusion can and should be more. It can be understood as embracing and planning for difference, building relationships across difference, teaching and learning that acknowledges and supports difference while also minimizing the use of identity categories as the foundation for arguments about inclusion. In other words, the silos of educational discourse based on identity categories need to be broken down, little by little, to reconceptualize inclusion as just, compassionate, and creative ways of living, teaching, and learning in a complex and diverse world. Inclusive teaching depends on deeply respectful relationships between teachers, students, and community members. Books in the series must make clear connections between theory and practice. Both are necessary ingredients for inclusion. This series will help teacher educators prepare teachers to be knowledgeable and skillful in teaching all students, regardless of their differences.

    7 publications

  • Title: College English Teacher Development in China

    College English Teacher Development in China

    A Mixed-method Study
    by Jiying Han (Author) 2017
    ©2017 Thesis
  • Title: Engaging in Conversation about Ideas in Teacher Education

    Engaging in Conversation about Ideas in Teacher Education

    by Fiona Benson (Volume editor) Caroline Riches (Volume editor)
    ©2009 Textbook
  • Title: Youth Culture Power

    Youth Culture Power

    A #HipHopEd Guide to Building Teacher-Student Relationships and Increasing Student Engagement
    by Jason Rawls (Author) John Robinson (Author) 2019
    ©2019 Textbook
  • Title: Teacher Leadership

    Teacher Leadership

    The «New» Foundations of Teacher Education- A Reader
    by Eleanor Blair (Volume editor)
    ©2011 Textbook
  • Title: Teacher TV

    Teacher TV

    Seventy Years of Teachers on Television, Second Edition
    by Mary M. Dalton (Author) Laura R. Linder (Author) 2020
    ©2020 Textbook
  • Title: Teacher Leadership

    Teacher Leadership

    The «New» Foundations of Teacher Education – A Reader – Revised edition
    by Eleanor Blair (Volume editor) 2011
    ©2016 Textbook
  • Title: Teachers Teaching Teachers

    Teachers Teaching Teachers

    Wit, Wisdom, and Whimsey for Troubled Times
    by Geneal G. Cantrell (Author) Gregory L. Cantrell (Author)
    ©2005 Textbook
  • Title: The Teacher’s Closet

    The Teacher’s Closet

    Lesbian and Gay Educators in Georgia’s Public Middle Schools
    by Heather A. Cooper (Author) 2018
    ©2019 Textbook
  • Title: Teacher Talk

    Teacher Talk

    A Post-Formal Inquiry into Educational Change
    by Raymond A. Horn, Jr. (Author)
    ©2000 Textbook
  • Title: Exil und Engagement

    Exil und Engagement

    Untersuchungen zur Lyrik und Poetik Hilde Domins
    by Michael Braun (Author)
    ©1994 Thesis
  • Title: Redefining Teacher Education

    Redefining Teacher Education

    The Theories of Jerome Bruner and the Practice of Training Teachers
    by Diane D. Orlofsky (Author)
    ©2001 Textbook
  • Title: Teacher Stories

    Teacher Stories

    Perspectives on Inclusive Pedagogical Language in Zimbabwe
    by Kumbirai Khosa (Author) 2019
    ©2019 Monographs
  • Title: Teach Boldly!

    Teach Boldly!

    Letters to Teachers about Contemporary Issues in Education
    by Mary Cain Fehr (Volume editor) Dennis Earl Fehr (Volume editor)
    ©2010 Textbook
  • Title: (Re)narrating Teacher Identity

    (Re)narrating Teacher Identity

    Telling Truths and Becoming Teachers
    by Audrey Lensmire (Volume editor) Anna Schick (Volume editor) 2017
    ©2017 Textbook
  • Title: Becoming a Teacher

    Becoming a Teacher

    Using Narrative as Reflective Practice. A Cross-Disciplinary Approach
    by Robert W. Jr. Blake (Volume editor) Brett Elizabeth Blake (Volume editor)
    ©2012 Textbook
  • Title: How Teachers Learn

    How Teachers Learn

    An Educational Psychology of Teacher Preparation
    by Michael D. Andrew (Volume editor) James R. Jelmberg (Volume editor)
    ©2010 Textbook
  • Title: Teacher Evaluation

    Teacher Evaluation

    The Charge and the Challenges
    by Kate O'Hara (Volume editor) 2014
    ©2015 Textbook
  • Title: The Pedagogy of Teacher Activism

    The Pedagogy of Teacher Activism

    Portraits of Four Teachers for Justice
    by Keith Catone (Author) 2017
    ©2017 Textbook
  • Title: Bande dessinée et engagement

    Bande dessinée et engagement

    by Fabrice Preyat (Volume editor) Jean-Louis Tilleuil (Volume editor) 2024
    ©2024 Edited Collection
  • Title: Lillian de Lissa, Women Teachers and Teacher Education in the Twentieth Century

    Lillian de Lissa, Women Teachers and Teacher Education in the Twentieth Century

    A Transnational History
    by Kay Whitehead (Author) 2016
    Monographs
  • Title: What a Coach Can Teach a Teacher

    What a Coach Can Teach a Teacher

    Lessons Urban Schools Can Learn from a Successful Sports Program
    by Jeffrey M.R. Duncan-Andrade (Author)
    ©2010 Textbook
  • Title: Traduire, un engagement politique ?

    Traduire, un engagement politique ?

    Préface de Tiphaine Samoyault
    by Florence Xiangyun Zhang (Volume editor) Nicolas Froeliger (Volume editor) 2021
    ©2021 Conference proceedings
  • Title: The Levinasian Teacher

    The Levinasian Teacher

    by Susan Bailey (Author) 2023
    ©2023 Monographs
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