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The purpose of the work/life balance series is to highlight
particular challenges that higher education faculty face as they
participate in the demands of the academy and try to prevent those
demands from invading their personal lives. On The High Wire looks
at a specific subset of university faculty, education faculty with
school-aged children, and the specific professional/ personal
balance these faculty need to find. The title On the High Wire
suggests the precarious nature of the "walk" for education faculty
who are parents of school-aged children. We know that our
identities are central to how we experience the world and how the
world reacts to us. This reality is clearly visible in this book.
These multiple identities and roles come into conflict at multiple
points and in different ways. This book explores these identities
and roles through auto ethnographic accounts written by varied
education faculty in order to make these tensions visible for the
field to address.
This insightful volume offers an overview of the fundamentals of
lesson student practice in US teacher education as well as examples
from math and science teacher educators using lesson study in their
local contexts. The number of teacher educators using lesson study
with preservice teachers is small but growing. This book is aimed
at teacher educators who may want to try lesson study in university
contexts without the challenge of translating the practice from the
K-12 context on their own. In this volume, lesson study is broadly
overviewed, attention is given to its constituent steps, and
examples of lesson study in preservice contexts are shared. Given
the broad array of teacher education program designs, numerous
contingencies guide teacher educators in their implementation of
lesson study, given their contextual affordances and limitations.
The lesson study descriptions and cases in this book will support
teacher educators and scholars across subject specialities and
geographic lines, as they seek instructional frameworks to advance
their pedagogical goals.
This insightful volume offers an overview of the fundamentals of
lesson student practice in US teacher education as well as examples
from math and science teacher educators using lesson study in their
local contexts. The number of teacher educators using lesson study
with preservice teachers is small but growing. This book is aimed
at teacher educators who may want to try lesson study in university
contexts without the challenge of translating the practice from the
K-12 context on their own. In this volume, lesson study is broadly
overviewed, attention is given to its constituent steps, and
examples of lesson study in preservice contexts are shared. Given
the broad array of teacher education program designs, numerous
contingencies guide teacher educators in their implementation of
lesson study, given their contextual affordances and limitations.
The lesson study descriptions and cases in this book will support
teacher educators and scholars across subject specialities and
geographic lines, as they seek instructional frameworks to advance
their pedagogical goals.
The purpose of the work/life balance series is to highlight
particular challenges that higher education faculty face as they
participate in the demands of the academy and try to prevent those
demands from invading their personal lives. On The High Wire looks
at a specific subset of university faculty, education faculty with
school-aged children, and the specific professional/ personal
balance these faculty need to find. The title On the High Wire
suggests the precarious nature of the "walk" for education faculty
who are parents of school-aged children. We know that our
identities are central to how we experience the world and how the
world reacts to us. This reality is clearly visible in this book.
These multiple identities and roles come into conflict at multiple
points and in different ways. This book explores these identities
and roles through auto ethnographic accounts written by varied
education faculty in order to make these tensions visible for the
field to address.
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