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Challenges arise when teachers seek to enact socially just
instruction while navigating social, classroom, and school
dynamics. This research-based, field-tested text offers an
accessible process for successfully negotiating these dynamics to
identify consequential inroads for making positive educational
change. With a focus on ELA instruction, but applicable to other
content areas, Lillge's clear framework offers a language for
naming, and practical tools for navigating, those spaces where
different frameworks for teaching and learning challenge teachers'
ability to act on their commitments to teach for justice.
Throughout the book, readers meet teachers who show how they
reframed challenges and identified opportunities to work with
others within inequitable systems to enact more just and equitable
teaching. These case studies in teachers' own words allow readers
to analyze how context and classroom culture influence teachers'
negotiation processes. Serving as more than thought-provoking
exemplars of what to do, the case studies and spotlighted
"application moments" also invite readers to reflect on their own
negotiations in the fieldwork, classrooms, and professional
learning communities where they teach and learn. Comprehensive and
illuminating, this book is a vital resource for pre-service
teachers, teacher educators, and novice teachers.
Challenges arise when teachers seek to enact socially just
instruction while navigating social, classroom, and school
dynamics. This research-based, field-tested text offers an
accessible process for successfully negotiating these dynamics to
identify consequential inroads for making positive educational
change. With a focus on ELA instruction, but applicable to other
content areas, Lillge's clear framework offers a language for
naming, and practical tools for navigating, those spaces where
different frameworks for teaching and learning challenge teachers'
ability to act on their commitments to teach for justice.
Throughout the book, readers meet teachers who show how they
reframed challenges and identified opportunities to work with
others within inequitable systems to enact more just and equitable
teaching. These case studies in teachers' own words allow readers
to analyze how context and classroom culture influence teachers'
negotiation processes. Serving as more than thought-provoking
exemplars of what to do, the case studies and spotlighted
"application moments" also invite readers to reflect on their own
negotiations in the fieldwork, classrooms, and professional
learning communities where they teach and learn. Comprehensive and
illuminating, this book is a vital resource for pre-service
teachers, teacher educators, and novice teachers.
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