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Featuring leading voices in the field from across Canada and
Europe, this edited collection offers empirical analyses of the
historical, social, cultural, and legislative determinants of
inclusive education in Canadian schools. Covering four thematic
areas including the structure, culture, and practices of inclusive
education, the volume offers comparative insights from a European
perspective, engaging critically with widely held views of Canada
as a world leader in inclusive education. Providing rich
comparisons with educational systems in Germany, Spain, and
Finland, chapters explore in-depth the assessment structures and
curricula specific to Canada, as well as educational policy, and
explore attitudes and practices in relation to diverse student
populations, including refugee and indigenous peoples, and students
with special educational needs. This volume will benefit
researchers, academics, and educators with an interest in
multicultural education, international and comparative education,
as well as educational policy more specifically. Those involved
with inclusion and special educational needs will also benefit from
this volume.
Organized by region, this edited collection provides a
comprehensive look at how teacher education has evolved regionally
and nationally in Canada. Offering an in-depth look at specific
provinces and territories, this volume contextualizes the landscape
of Canadian public education and the place of teacher education
within it. Shedding light on the ways Canadian teacher education
was shaped by and in turn influenced its environment, contributors
evaluate the current state of education and consider themes,
tensions, and historical developments, presenting a view of teacher
education that encompasses both its future and its past. A
significant contribution to the field of curriculum history, this
book offers a benchmark for conversations about the purposes,
means, and ends of teacher education in Canada.
Organized by region, this edited collection provides a
comprehensive look at how teacher education has evolved regionally
and nationally in Canada. Offering an in-depth look at specific
provinces and territories, this volume contextualizes the landscape
of Canadian public education and the place of teacher education
within it. Shedding light on the ways Canadian teacher education
was shaped by and in turn influenced its environment, contributors
evaluate the current state of education and consider themes,
tensions, and historical developments, presenting a view of teacher
education that encompasses both its future and its past. A
significant contribution to the field of curriculum history, this
book offers a benchmark for conversations about the purposes,
means, and ends of teacher education in Canada.
Offering an accessible entry into curriculum theory, this book
defines and contextualizes key concepts for novice and experienced
students. Leading scholars in curriculum studies provide short
anchor texts that introduce, define, and situate contemporary
curriculum theory constructs. Each anchor text is followed by two
concise, creative keyword responses that demonstrate varied
perspectives and connections, allowing readers to reflect on and
engage with the personal relevance of these fundamental concepts.
Useful to instructors and scholars alike, this book explains
keyword writing as a teaching and learning strategy and invites
readers to enter the complicated conversations of contemporary
curriculum theory through their own creative, personal responses.
Featuring wide-ranging, nuanced, and varied commentary on major
relevant themes, as well as discussion questions for students, this
book is an essential text for doctoral and masters-level courses in
curriculum studies.
Offering an accessible entry into curriculum theory, this book
defines and contextualizes key concepts for novice and experienced
students. Leading scholars in curriculum studies provide short
anchor texts that introduce, define, and situate contemporary
curriculum theory constructs. Each anchor text is followed by two
concise, creative keyword responses that demonstrate varied
perspectives and connections, allowing readers to reflect on and
engage with the personal relevance of these fundamental concepts.
Useful to instructors and scholars alike, this book explains
keyword writing as a teaching and learning strategy and invites
readers to enter the complicated conversations of contemporary
curriculum theory through their own creative, personal responses.
Featuring wide-ranging, nuanced, and varied commentary on major
relevant themes, as well as discussion questions for students, this
book is an essential text for doctoral and masters-level courses in
curriculum studies.
Over the course of the twentieth century, North American public
school curricula moved away from the classics and the humanities,
and towards 'progressive' subjects such as health and social
studies. This book delves into how progressivist thinking
transformed the rhetoric and the structure of schooling during the
first half of the twentieth century, with echoes that reverberate
strongly today, and investigates historical meanings of progressive
education. Theodore Michael Christou closely examines the case of
interwar Ontario, where the entire landscape of public education,
including curricula and avenues to post-secondary study, were
radically transformed over just twenty years. Christou
contextualizes this reformist thinking in light of a social,
political, and economic climate of change, which seemed to demand
schools that could actively relate learning to the real world.
Through its examination of educational journals published
throughout the interwar period and previously unexplored archival
sources, this book illuminates how the present structure of
curricula and schooling were achieved.
This book is Theodore Michael Christou's first full length
collection of Poetry. It is part of the Hidden Brook Press,
celebrated North Shore Series - the 26th book in this renowned
Canadian literature series. Theodore Michael Christou is an
Assistant Professor at Queen's University within the Faculty of
Education. He began his professional teaching career as an
elementary school teacher in Scarborough, Ontario, with the Toronto
District School Board. Following a circuitous path, which included
doctoral studies in Curriculum Studies, Theodore commenced his
academic course on the tenure track in Fredericton at the
University of New Brunswick. In July 2012, that course led
westwards, back to Kingston, Ontario, and to Queen's University. He
currently resides in Kingston with his wife, Aglaia. Theodore's
teaching and research extend to several disciplines; in particular,
he concentrates upon history of education, philosophy of education,
social studies, and the theory and practice of history. He is an
advocate for the humanities in teacher education. Poetry permeates
everything, and everything is verse.
Raymond Mason is an Ojibway activist who campaigns for the rights
of residential school survivors and a founder of Spirit Wind, an
organization that played a key role in the development of the
Indian Residential School Settlement Agreement. This memoir offers
a firsthand account of the personal and political challenges Mason
confronted on this journey. A riveting and at times harrowing read,
Spirit of the Grassroots People describes the author's experiences
in Indian day and residential schools in Manitoba and his struggles
to find meaning in life after trauma and abuse. Mason details the
work that he and his colleagues did over many years to gain
recognition and compensation for their suffering. Drawing from
Indigenous oral traditions as well as Western historiography, the
work applies the concept of two-eyed seeing to the histories of
colonialism and education in Canada. The memoir is supplemented by
a final chapter in which Theodore Michael Christou and Jackson Pind
put Mason's story into a historical and educational context. An
essential key to understanding the legacy of Indian residential and
day schools, this text is both a documentation of history and a
deeply personal story of a human experience.
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