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In recent years there have been strong movements of reforms in
teacher education. The most common are intended to adjust teacher
preparation to the standardization demands of NCLB, Race to the
Top, and CAEP to make teacher education more accountable. These
reforms-carried out in the name of excellence, accountability,
diversity, and inclusion-constitute subliminal efforts to
appropriate the possibilities for real transformation in teacher
education. However, in spite of the pervasive rhetoric to identify
diversity and social justice with the accountability and
standardization movement, there are endeavors to create
transformations in teacher preparation that are authentic. These
deliberate changes seek to counteract the neoliberal vision of
school reform and strive to reclaim the original goals of public
education represented in a vision of rigorous content knowledge,
democratic schooling, and social justice. Appropriating the
Discourse of Social Justice in Teacher Education is a testimony to
that kind of authentic reform. It documents the transformational
efforts of a teacher education program that infused the preparation
of its teachers with a vision of education as a public good. This
book validates the claim that the process of reproduction of social
inequalities in teacher education is not a perfect, static process,
but on the contrary, the real "seeds of transformation" within
teacher education departments are abundant.
In recent years there have been strong movements of reforms in
teacher education. The most common are intended to adjust teacher
preparation to the standardization demands of NCLB, Race to the
Top, and CAEP to make teacher education more accountable. These
reforms-carried out in the name of excellence, accountability,
diversity, and inclusion-constitute subliminal efforts to
appropriate the possibilities for real transformation in teacher
education. However, in spite of the pervasive rhetoric to identify
diversity and social justice with the accountability and
standardization movement, there are endeavors to create
transformations in teacher preparation that are authentic. These
deliberate changes seek to counteract the neoliberal vision of
school reform and strive to reclaim the original goals of public
education represented in a vision of rigorous content knowledge,
democratic schooling, and social justice. Appropriating the
Discourse of Social Justice in Teacher Education is a testimony to
that kind of authentic reform. It documents the transformational
efforts of a teacher education program that infused the preparation
of its teachers with a vision of education as a public good. This
book validates the claim that the process of reproduction of social
inequalities in teacher education is not a perfect, static process,
but on the contrary, the real "seeds of transformation" within
teacher education departments are abundant.
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