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How interwoven are the lives of children, families, teachers and
school leaders?
In this important new book seven authors bring together stories and
questions about the lives of children, families, teachers and
administrators. Lives are seen up close, in all their
particularity, and explored in terms of the contexts that shape the
experiences of students and staff. These stories provide an
alternative view of what counts in schools, with a shift away from
viewing the school as a business model towards an idea of schools
as places to engage citizenship.
Building upon Jean Clandinin's 20 years of narrative inquiry where
she worked and learned alongside school practitioners for extended
periods of time, this book uses a narratively-constructed
theoretical background of personal practical knowledge,
professional knowledge landscapes, and stories to live by to
provide both a language and a storied framework for understanding
lives in school. In two urban multicultural schools in western
Canada, the co-authors of this book engaged in narrative inquiries
alongside children, teachers, families and principals. As these
narrative inquiries were negotiated at each site the co-authors
lived in the school, for the most part in particular classrooms
alongside a teacher where, as relationships developed, children as
well as some family members were invited to participate in the
inquiry. Articulating the complex ethical dilemmas and issues that
face people in schools every day, this fascinating study of school
life and lives in school raises new questions about who and what
education is for and provokes the re-imagining of schools as places
to attend to the wholeness of people's lives.
Thecomplexities and possibilities of the meeting of diverse
teachers', children's, families' and school leaders' lives in
schools shape new insights about the interwoven lives of children
and teachers, and raise important, lingering questions about the
impact of these relationships on the unfolding lives ofchildren.
This book documents a radical shift in thinking from focusing on
the school as the place where curriculum is made to realizing the
ways children and families are engaged as curriculum makers in
homes, in communities, and in the spaces in-between, outside of
school. The narrative inquiry framing this book investigates the
tensions experienced by teachers, children and families as they
make curriculum attentive to lives. It draws on a research project
involving multiperspectival narrative inquiries spanning four
research sites and traces the tensions experienced by children,
families and teachers in multiple curriculum making sites and some
of the profound identity making and assessment making implications
that become visible. Its attention to the relational in narrative
inquiry is focused on tensions that shape lives and, as well, the
unfolding of narrative inquiries. This informative book has a wide
reaching audience of educational researchers, teacher educators,
research methodologists, particularly those interested in narrative
inquiry, curriculum scholars, graduate students, university
faculty, teachers, administrators and parents alike.
How interwoven are the lives of children, families, teachers and
school leaders?
In this important new book seven authors bring together stories and
questions about the lives of children, families, teachers and
administrators. Lives are seen up close, in all their
particularity, and explored in terms of the contexts that shape the
experiences of students and staff. These stories provide an
alternative view of what counts in schools, with a shift away from
viewing the school as a business model towards an idea of schools
as places to engage citizenship.
Building upon Jean Clandinin's 20 years of narrative inquiry where
she worked and learned alongside school practitioners for extended
periods of time, this book uses a narratively-constructed
theoretical background of personal practical knowledge,
professional knowledge landscapes, and stories to live by to
provide both a language and a storied framework for understanding
lives in school. In two urban multicultural schools in western
Canada, the co-authors of this book engaged in narrative inquiries
alongside children, teachers, families and principals. As these
narrative inquiries were negotiated at each site the co-authors
lived in the school, for the most part in particular classrooms
alongside a teacher where, as relationships developed, children as
well as some family members were invited to participate in the
inquiry. Articulating the complex ethical dilemmas and issues that
face people in schools every day, this fascinating study of school
life and lives in school raises new questions about who and what
education is for and provokes the re-imagining of schools as places
to attend to the wholeness of people's lives.
Thecomplexities and possibilities of the meeting of diverse
teachers', children's, families' and school leaders' lives in
schools shape new insights about the interwoven lives of children
and teachers, and raise important, lingering questions about the
impact of these relationships on the unfolding lives ofchildren.
This book documents a radical shift in thinking from focusing on
the school as the place where curriculum is made to realizing the
ways children and families are engaged as curriculum makers in
homes, in communities, and in the spaces in-between, outside of
school. The narrative inquiry framing this book investigates the
tensions experienced by teachers, children and families as they
make curriculum attentive to lives. It draws on a research project
involving multiperspectival narrative inquiries spanning four
research sites and traces the tensions experienced by children,
families and teachers in multiple curriculum making sites and some
of the profound identity making and assessment making implications
that become visible. Its attention to the relational in narrative
inquiry is focused on tensions that shape lives and, as well, the
unfolding of narrative inquiries. This informative book has a wide
reaching audience of educational researchers, teacher educators,
research methodologists, particularly those interested in narrative
inquiry, curriculum scholars, graduate students, university
faculty, teachers, administrators and parents alike.
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