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Students as Curriculum [Kietas viršelis]

(University of Illinois Chicago, USA), (Miami University, USA)
  • Formatas: Hardback, 414 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 234x156x26 mm, weight: 654 g
  • Serija: Landscapes of Education
  • Išleidimo metai: 24-Mar-2025
  • Leidėjas: Information Age Publishing
  • ISBN-13: 9798887308395
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Hardback, 414 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 234x156x26 mm, weight: 654 g
  • Serija: Landscapes of Education
  • Išleidimo metai: 24-Mar-2025
  • Leidėjas: Information Age Publishing
  • ISBN-13: 9798887308395
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:

This book explores possibilities for students to have a much greater role in curriculum than mere receivers of it. In fact, we suggest what happens when students are the curriculum.



This book explores possibilities for students to have a much greater role in curriculum than mere receivers of it. In fact, we suggest what happens when students are the curriculum. We draw upon our scholarship (theory, practice, and praxis) over the years to show how educational experiences can be invigorated and embodied when students ask the what’s worthwhile questions, joining teachers as fellow curricularists, action researchers, and practical inquirers, to engage in creative insubordination that refines the theories within (and among) them through lifelong education. Such educational experience stems from listening carefully to students and creates meaning because it is of and by students, and therefore more genuinely for them. It is cultural experience writ large because it draws on curricula of educational experience from many spheres of life (outside of school and in school) to continuously reconstruct who and what they are. It draws on teacher and student lore and is improvisational, pedagogically pivoting, adapting, and emerging. It finds new spaces, crevices, and cracks wherein students continuously re-create themselves – the curriculum that they are becoming. This book includes previously published articles and book chapters by William H. Schubert and Brian D. Schultz. The authors include dialogic interludes between chapters to introduce, reflect on, and connect the chapters and their theorizing.

Chapter
1. Dialogic introduction

Chapter
2. Students as curriculum

Chapter
3. What is worthwhile: From knowing and needing to being and
sharing?

Chapter
4. Excerpt from Spectacular things happen along the way: Lessons from
an Urban Classroom

Chapter
5. Teacher education as theory development

Chapter
6. Navigating curricular controversies, teaching in the cracks, and
threshold concepts

Chapter
7. Toward curricula that are of, by, and therefore for students;
William H. Schubert and Ann L. Lopez-Schubert

Chapter
8. Curricular possibilities: Listening to, hearing, and learning from
students

Chapter
9. Curriculum as cultural experience in student lives; William H.
Schubert and Ann L. Schubert

Chapter
10. Of kids and Cokes: Learning from, with, and alongside children

Chapter
11. On the practical value of practical inquiry for teachers and
students

Chapter
12. Teacher lore: A basis for understanding praxis

Chapter
13. Pedagogical pivoting, emergent curriculum, and knowledge
production; Brian D. Schultz and Stephanie Pearson

Chapter
14. Teacher and student lore: Their ways of looking at it

Chapter
15. A shorty teaching teachers: Student insight and perspective on
keeping it real in the classroom; Brian D. Schultz and Paris Banks

Chapter
16. Students as action researchers: Historical precedent and
contradiction

Chapter
17. Teaching in the cracks: Student engagement through social action
curriculum projects; Brian D. Schultz, Jennifer McSurley, and Milli Salguero

Chapter
18. Outside curriculum and public pedagogy

Chapter
19. Curriculum in the making: Theory, practice, and social action
curriculum projects; Brian D. Schultz and Jon Baricovich

Chapter
20. The curriculum-curriculum: Experiences in teaching curriculum

Chapter
21. Perspectives on educational evaluation from curricular contexts
William H. Schubert in Professor Emeritus and former University Scholar from the University of Illinois Chicago. He is recipient of the Lifetime Achievement Award in Curriculum Studies from American Educational Research Association, a Fellow of the International Academy of Education, former president of the John Dewey Society, and The Society for the Study of Curriculum History, and recently the Society of Professors of Education honored him by establishing the William H. Schubert Award for Curricular Speculation. His 20-plus books, over 200 articles and chapters, and related documents are available in the William H. Schubert Curriculum Studies Collection in the Zach S. Henderson Library of Georgia Southern University.



Brian D. Schultz is Professor and Virginia Todd Memorial Scholar of Curriculum Studies in the Department of Teaching, Curriculum & Educational Inquiry and Associate Dean in the College of Education, Health & Society at Miami University. Prior to joining Miamis faculty, Brian was Bernard J. Brommel Distinguished Research Professor and Chair of the Department of Educational Inquiry & Curriculum Studies at Northeastern Illinois University. Brian has served the field as president of Society of Professors of Education, factotum and treasurer of Professors of Curriculum, and in leadership roles with the American Educational Research Association. He is the author of Spectacular Things Happen Along the Way: Lessons from an Urban Classroom, and Teaching in the Cracks: Openings and Opportunities for Student-Centered, Action-Focused Curriculum.