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Books > Children's & Educational > Life skills & personal awareness, general studies > Personal, health & social education (PHSE) > Citizenship
The body of literature has pointed to the benefits of educational
interventions in facilitating improvement in school motivation and,
by implication, learning and achievement. However, it is now
recognized that most extant motivation and learning enhancing
intervention programs are grounded in Western motivational and
learning perspectives, such as attribution, expectancy-value,
implicit theories of intelligence, self-determination, and
self-regulated learning theories. Further, empirical evidence for
the positive impacts of these interventions seems to have primarily
emerged from North American settings. The cross-cultural
transferability and translatability of such educational
interventions, however, are often assumed rather than critically
assessed and adapted before their implementation in other cultures.
In this volume, the editors invited scholars to reassess their
intervention work from a sociocultural lens. Regardless of the
different theoretical perspectives and strategies they adopt in
their interventions, these scholars are in unison on the importance
of taking into account sociodemographic backgrounds of the students
and sociocultural contexts of the interventions to optimize the
benefits of such interventions. Indeed, placing culture at the
heart of designing, implementing, and evaluating
educationalinterventions could be a key not only to strengthen the
effectiveness and efficacy of educational interventions, but also
to ensure that students of a wider and more diverse range of
educational and cultural backgrounds reap the benefits from such
interventions. This volume constitutes the foundation towards a
deeper and more systematic understanding of culturally relevant and
responsive educational interventions.
This book examines the ways in which PDSs build cultural competence
for various stakeholders including pre-service teachers, classroom
teachers, school leaders, college faculty, and K-12 students. Given
the increased national attention on the opportunity gap present in
underserved marginalized communities across the country, the
authors in this series identify a combination of research-based
practices and institutional changes that increase student
attainment and develop educators' capacity to serve a range of
diverse learners.We are certain the timeliness of the topic will
provide educators with context for understanding the role PDSs play
in the creation of culturally responsive schools.
Addressing social justice issues in a physical education context is
necessary both at the higher education and PK-12 settings. Limited
undergraduate and graduate programs educate their students about
social justice issues, thus, resulting in licensed teachers who
lack the content knowledge, comfort level and pedagogical tools on
how to educate students about issues related to social justice.
Grounded in the transformative pedagogy theoretical framework, this
book will offer practical lessons and strategies on a wide variety
of social issues (e.g., body, race, self-identity, immigration)
that can be used in teacher education and the PK-12 setting. The
goal is for teacher educators and practitioners to feel more
comfortable with teaching about and for social justice and believe
this resource will enhance their content and pedagogical knowledge
in the quest to achieve that goal. The purpose of this book is to
provide physical education teacher educators and PK-12 physical
education teachers with lesson plans and resources on how to
address social justice issues in a physical education setting. This
book will include sample lesson plans/activities that address a
wide variety of social issues - the what, the how and the
challenges and possibilities that the author(s) encountered when
teaching such a lesson/activity. Addressing social justice issues
has been limited in physical education, both in higher education
and PK-12, especially in the United States. Numerous scholars,
internationally, have engaged in research studies that explored how
social justice issues are addressed in physical education teacher
education. Although we have research to support the limitations and
complexities of teaching about sociocultural issues and for social
justice, a more practical resource for teacher educators and
inservice teachers is needed. The market for this book will be
physical education teacher educators and PK-12 physical education
teachers throughout the world.
Louis is back And this time, he's learning all about personal
space. Louis, a self-taught space expert is delighted to learn that
his teacher has sent him to the principal's office to attend
personal space camp. Eager to learn more about lunar landings,
space suits, and other cosmic concepts, Louis soon discovers that
he has much to learn about personal space right here on earth.
Written with style, wit, and rhythm, personal space camp addresses
the complex issue of respect for another person's physical
boundaries. Told from Louis perspective, this story is a must-have
resource for parents, teachers, and counselors who want to
communicate the idea of personal space in a manner that connects
with kids.
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