Teachers’ Ethical Self-Encounters with Counter-Stories in the Classroom : From Implicated to Concerned Subjects, Paperback / softback Book

Teachers’ Ethical Self-Encounters with Counter-Stories in the Classroom : From Implicated to Concerned Subjects Paperback / softback

Part of the Studies in Curriculum Theory Series series

Paperback / softback

  • Information

Description

Offering unique theoretical perspectives, autobiographical insights and narrative accounts from elementary and secondary educators, this monograph illustrates the need for teachers to engage critically with counter-stories as they teach to issues including colonization, war, and genocide.

Juxtaposing Pinar’s concept of ethical self-encounters with theories of subjective reconstruction, multidirectional memory, and autobiographical narration, this rich volume considers teachers’ ethical responsibility to interrogate the curriculum via self-reflection and self-formation.

Using cases from workshops and classrooms conducted over five years, Strong-Wilson traces teachers’ and students’ movement from "implicated subjects" to "concerned subjects." In doing so, she challenges the neoliberal dynamics which erode teacher agency. By working at the intersections of pedagogy, literary theory and memory studies, this book introduces timely arguments on subjectivity and ethical responsibility to the field of education in the Global North.

It will prove to be an essential resource for post-graduate researchers, scholars and academics working with curriculum theory and pedagogical theory in contemporary education.

Information

Other Formats

Save 11%

£36.99

£32.85

Information