0
Your cart

Your cart is empty

Browse All Departments
  • All Departments
Price
  • R500 - R1,000 (1)
  • R1,000 - R2,500 (3)
  • R2,500 - R5,000 (4)
  • -
Status
Brand

Showing 1 - 8 of 8 matches in All Departments

Radically Dreaming (Hardcover): Tricia M. Kress, Robert Lake, Elizabeth Stein Radically Dreaming (Hardcover)
Tricia M. Kress, Robert Lake, Elizabeth Stein
R1,171 Discovery Miles 11 710 Ships in 10 - 15 working days
Critical Praxis Research - Breathing New Life into Research Methods for Teachers (Hardcover, 2011 Ed.): Tricia M. Kress Critical Praxis Research - Breathing New Life into Research Methods for Teachers (Hardcover, 2011 Ed.)
Tricia M. Kress
R2,675 Discovery Miles 26 750 Ships in 18 - 22 working days

Critical Praxis Research (CPR) is a teacher research methodology designed to bridge the divide between practitioner and scholar, drawing together many strands to explain the research process not just as something teacher researchers do, but as a fundamental part of who teacher researchers are. Emphasizing the researcher over the method, CPR embraces and amplifies the skills and passions teachers naturally bring to their research endeavours. Emerging from the tradition of critical pedagogy, Critical Praxis Research: Breathing New Life into Research Methods for Teachers transcends longstanding debates over quantitative vs. qualitative and scholar vs. practitioner research. The text examines the histories and current applications of common methodologies and re-conceptualizes the ways that these methodologies can be used to enhance teachers' identities as practitioners and researchers. It also provides a critical examination of the role of Institutional Review Boards, and explores the complexity and ethics of data collection, data analysis, and writing. Through guiding questions and writing prompts, the author encourages readers to think through the process of design and conducting CPR. The text is theoretically rich, but written in an accessible style infused with metaphor, irony, and humour. Critical Praxis Research: Breathing New Life into Research Methods for Teachers is both instructive and uplifting, sending the message that research is difficult but also joyful, like life itself.

Maxine Greene and the Pedagogy of Social Imagination - An Intellectual Genealogy (Paperback): Hannah Spector, Robert Lake,... Maxine Greene and the Pedagogy of Social Imagination - An Intellectual Genealogy (Paperback)
Hannah Spector, Robert Lake, Tricia M. Kress
R1,232 Discovery Miles 12 320 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

Devoted to and inspired by the late Maxine Greene, a champion of education and advocator of the arts, this book recognizes the importance of Greene's scholarship by revisiting her oeuvre in the context of the intellectual historicity that shaped its formation. As a scholar, Greene dialogued with philosophers, social theorists, writers, musicians, and artists. These conversations reveal the ways in which the arts, just like philosophy and science, allow for the facilitation of "wide-awakeness," a term that is central to Greene's pedagogy. Amidst contemporary trends of neoliberal, one-size-fits-all curriculum reforms in which the arts are typically squeezed out or pushed aside, Greene's work reminds us that the social imagination is stunted without the arts. Artistic ways of knowing allow for people to see beyond their own worlds and beyond "what is" into other worlds of "what was" and "what might" be some day. This volume demonstrates Maxine Greene's profound ability to illuminate the importance of the artistic world and the imaginary for development of the self in the world and for encouraging a "wide-awakeness" reflective of an emerging political awareness and a longing for a democratic world that "is not yet." This book was originally published as a Special Issue of The Review of Education, Pedagogy and Cultural Studies.

Challenging Status Quo Retrenchment - New Directions in Critical Research (Paperback, New): Tricia M. Kress, Curry Malott, Brad... Challenging Status Quo Retrenchment - New Directions in Critical Research (Paperback, New)
Tricia M. Kress, Curry Malott, Brad Porfilio
R1,334 Discovery Miles 13 340 Ships in 18 - 22 working days

This year (2012) marks ten years of No Child Left Behind and the U.S. federal government's official designation of what qualifies as "scientifically based research" (SBR) in education. Combined, these two policies have resulted in a narrowing of education via standardization and high stakes testing (Au, 2007) as well as the curtailment of forms of inquiry that are deemed legitimate for examining education (Wright, 2006). While there has been much debate about the benefits and limitations of the NCLB legislation (e.g., Au, 2010) and SBR (e.g., Eisenhart & Towne, 2003), critical researchers have held strong to their position: The reductionistic narrowing of education curricula and educational research cannot solve the present and historical inequities in society and education (Shields, 2012). Contrarily, reductionism (via standardization and/or methodological prescription) exacerbates the challenges we face because it effectively erases the epistemological, ontological, and axiological diversity necessary for disrupting hegemonic social structures that lie at the root of human suffering (Kincheloe, 2004). Not only has NCLB proven incapable of overcoming inequalities, but there seems to be sufficient evidence to suggest it was never really intended to eliminate poverty and human suffering. That is, it seems NCLB, despite its lofty title and public discourse, is actually designed to advance the agenda of handing public education over to for-profit corporations to manage and privatize thereby intensifying the capitalist class' war on those who rely on a wage to survive (Malott, 2010). In the present ethos, reductionism upholds and retrenches the status quo (i.e. the basic structures of power), and it puts at risk education and educational research as means of working toward social justice (Biesta, 2007). Because social justice can be interpreted in multiple ways, we might note that we understand critical social justice as oriented toward action and social change. Thus, critical education and research may have potential to contribute to a number of social justice imperatives, such as: redistributing land from the neo-colonizing settler-state to Indigenous peoples, halting exploitative labor relations and hazardous working conditions for wage-earners, and engaging in reparations with formerly enslaved communities.

Challenging Status Quo Retrenchment - New Directions in Critical Research (Hardcover, New): Tricia M. Kress, Curry Malott, Brad... Challenging Status Quo Retrenchment - New Directions in Critical Research (Hardcover, New)
Tricia M. Kress, Curry Malott, Brad Porfilio
R2,538 Discovery Miles 25 380 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

This year (2012) marks ten years of No Child Left Behind and the U.S. federal government's official designation of what qualifies as "scientifically based research" (SBR) in education. Combined, these two policies have resulted in a narrowing of education via standardization and high stakes testing (Au, 2007) as well as the curtailment of forms of inquiry that are deemed legitimate for examining education (Wright, 2006). While there has been much debate about the benefits and limitations of the NCLB legislation (e.g., Au, 2010) and SBR (e.g., Eisenhart & Towne, 2003), critical researchers have held strong to their position: The reductionistic narrowing of education curricula and educational research cannot solve the present and historical inequities in society and education (Shields, 2012). Contrarily, reductionism (via standardization and/or methodological prescription) exacerbates the challenges we face because it effectively erases the epistemological, ontological, and axiological diversity necessary for disrupting hegemonic social structures that lie at the root of human suffering (Kincheloe, 2004). Not only has NCLB proven incapable of overcoming inequalities, but there seems to be sufficient evidence to suggest it was never really intended to eliminate poverty and human suffering. That is, it seems NCLB, despite its lofty title and public discourse, is actually designed to advance the agenda of handing public education over to for-profit corporations to manage and privatize thereby intensifying the capitalist class' war on those who rely on a wage to survive (Malott, 2010). In the present ethos, reductionism upholds and retrenches the status quo (i.e. the basic structures of power), and it puts at risk education and educational research as means of working toward social justice (Biesta, 2007). Because social justice can be interpreted in multiple ways, we might note that we understand critical social justice as oriented toward action and social change. Thus, critical education and research may have potential to contribute to a number of social justice imperatives, such as: redistributing land from the neo-colonizing settler-state to Indigenous peoples, halting exploitative labor relations and hazardous working conditions for wage-earners, and engaging in reparations with formerly enslaved communities.

Maxine Greene and the Pedagogy of Social Imagination - An Intellectual Genealogy (Hardcover): Hannah Spector, Robert Lake,... Maxine Greene and the Pedagogy of Social Imagination - An Intellectual Genealogy (Hardcover)
Hannah Spector, Robert Lake, Tricia M. Kress
R4,203 Discovery Miles 42 030 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

Devoted to and inspired by the late Maxine Greene, a champion of education and advocator of the arts, this book recognizes the importance of Greene's scholarship by revisiting her oeuvre in the context of the intellectual historicity that shaped its formation. As a scholar, Greene dialogued with philosophers, social theorists, writers, musicians, and artists. These conversations reveal the ways in which the arts, just like philosophy and science, allow for the facilitation of "wide-awakeness," a term that is central to Greene's pedagogy. Amidst contemporary trends of neoliberal, one-size-fits-all curriculum reforms in which the arts are typically squeezed out or pushed aside, Greene's work reminds us that the social imagination is stunted without the arts. Artistic ways of knowing allow for people to see beyond their own worlds and beyond "what is" into other worlds of "what was" and "what might" be some day. This volume demonstrates Maxine Greene's profound ability to illuminate the importance of the artistic world and the imaginary for development of the self in the world and for encouraging a "wide-awakeness" reflective of an emerging political awareness and a longing for a democratic world that "is not yet." This book was originally published as a Special Issue of The Review of Education, Pedagogy and Cultural Studies.

Critical Praxis Research - Breathing New Life into Research Methods for Teachers (Paperback, 2011 ed.): Tricia M. Kress Critical Praxis Research - Breathing New Life into Research Methods for Teachers (Paperback, 2011 ed.)
Tricia M. Kress
R2,653 Discovery Miles 26 530 Ships in 18 - 22 working days

Critical Praxis Research (CPR) is a teacher research methodology designed to bridge the divide between practitioner and scholar, drawing together many strands to explain the research process not just as something teacher researchers do, but as a fundamental part of who teacher researchers are. Emphasizing the researcher over the method, CPR embraces and amplifies the skills and passions teachers naturally bring to their research endeavours. Emerging from the tradition of critical pedagogy, Critical Praxis Research: Breathing New Life into Research Methods for Teachers transcends longstanding debates over quantitative vs. qualitative and scholar vs. practitioner research. The text examines the histories and current applications of common methodologies and re-conceptualizes the ways that these methodologies can be used to enhance teachers identities as practitioners and researchers. It also provides a critical examination of the role of Institutional Review Boards, and explores the complexity and ethics of data collection, data analysis, and writing. Through guiding questions and writing prompts, the author encourages readers to think through the process of design and conducting CPR. The text is theoretically rich, but written in an accessible style infused with metaphor, irony, and humour. Critical Praxis Research: Breathing New Life into Research Methods for Teachers is both instructive and uplifting, sending the message that research is difficult but also joyful, like life itself."

Radically Dreaming (Paperback): Tricia M. Kress, Robert Lake, Elizabeth Stein Radically Dreaming (Paperback)
Tricia M. Kress, Robert Lake, Elizabeth Stein
R870 Discovery Miles 8 700 Ships in 18 - 22 working days
Free Delivery
Pinterest Twitter Facebook Google+
You may like...
The Goldfinch
Ansel Elgort, Oakes Fegley, … DVD R271 Discovery Miles 2 710
Dragon Ball Super, Vol. 17
Akira Toriyama Paperback R270 R241 Discovery Miles 2 410
The Soviet Invasion of Finland, 1939-40
Carl Van Dyke Hardcover R4,496 Discovery Miles 44 960
Apple Black, Volume 3, Volume 3…
Odunze Oguguo, Whyt Manga, … Paperback R254 R230 Discovery Miles 2 300
Scatterling Of Africa - My Early Years
Johnny Clegg Paperback  (1)
R360 R326 Discovery Miles 3 260
Annual Reports in Computational…
David A Dixon Hardcover R5,518 Discovery Miles 55 180
My Unapologetic Diaries
Joan Collins Paperback R441 R403 Discovery Miles 4 030
Photoelectrochemical Bioanalysis…
Muhammad Altaf, Raja Shahid Ashraf, … Paperback R4,171 Discovery Miles 41 710
Foreign Accents - Chinese American Verse…
Steven Yao Hardcover R1,964 R1,504 Discovery Miles 15 040
Liberation Diaries - Reflections On 30…
Busani Ngcaweni Paperback R300 R277 Discovery Miles 2 770

 

Partners