Keywords in the Social Studies
Concepts and Conversations
(Sprache: Englisch)
Keywords in the Social Studies: Concepts and Conversations takes words commonly used in social studies education and unsettles them in ways that will redefine the field for years to come.
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Keywords in the Social Studies: Concepts and Conversations takes words commonly used in social studies education and unsettles them in ways that will redefine the field for years to come.
Klappentext zu „Keywords in the Social Studies “
Keywords in the Social Studies takes words commonly used in social studies education and unsettles them in ways that will redefine the field for years to come. Throughout the book, leading and emerging scholars in social studies education experiment with keywords central to the field seen as either taken for granted (such as family and technology) or perennially contested (such as terrorism and freedom), offering readers new positions, approaches, and orientations to what is possible to teach in the social studies. Focusing on democratic ways of living and being in the world as citizens, this innovative collection offers chapters organized around twenty-six keywords and ten invited responses to survey the unsettled terrain we call "the social studies." Each chapter attends to a specific keyword selected for both its contemporary applicability to different aspects of K-12 social studies education and to its dominant presence in the curriculum thought that structures social studies education in classrooms, museums, and beyond. Drawing inspiration from Raymond Williams' work on keywords in culture, over fifty authors discuss complex and contested components of each keyword by way of offering diverse accounts that range from autobiographical narratives to historical genealogies, from critical implications of specific curriculum texts to offering vignettes of classroom teaching that deploy a keyword concept in practice. Keywords in the Social Studies is timely and essential reading for graduate students and faculty in social studies education and curriculum studies; students and teacher candidates in undergraduate and graduate education courses; and practitioners teaching in schools, museums, and other spaces of learning.
Inhaltsverzeichnis zu „Keywords in the Social Studies “
List of Tables - Acknowledgments - Anne-Lise Halvorsen: Foreword: Innovations in Knowledge Construction - Mark Helmsing/Daniel G. Krutka/Annie McMahon Whitlock: Introduction: Unsettling the Social Studies - Sarah B. Shear/Christine R. Stanton: Indigenous - Tommy Ender: Ethnic - Amanda E. Vickery/Delandrea Hall: Spilling the Lemonade in Social Studies: A Response to the Culture Section - Mark Helmsing/Annie McMahon Whitlock: Time - Gabriel A. Reich: Not So Fast!: A Response to the Time, Continuity, and Change Section - Sajani Jinny Menon/Muna Saleh: Borders - Jodi Latremouille: Environment - Gabriel P. Swarts: Home - Whitney G. Blankenship: Place - Stacey L. Kerr: Space - Jason Harshman: Between There and Here: A Response to the People, Places, and Environments Section - Megan List: Gender - Kristen E. Duncan: Race - Daniel T. Bordwell/Ryan D. Oto/J.B. Mayo, Jr.: Sexuality - Ashley N. Woodson: On and On: A Response to the Individual Development and Identity Section - Erik Jon Byker, Amy J. Good, and Nakeshia N. Williams: Community - Erin C. Adams: Family - Colleen Fitzpatrick/Stephanie Van Hover: Religion - Sara A. Levy: Embracing Complexity in the Social Studies: A Response to the Individuals, Groups, and Institutions Section - Jane C. Lo/Amanda Geiger: Democracy - Eli Kean/Jeffrey Craig: Freedom - Wayne Journell: Terrorism - Cathryn van Kessel: Passwords to Citizenship?: A Response to the Power, Authority, and Governance Section - Kim Pennington: Consumption - E. Wayne Ross: Class - Matthew T. Missias/Kristy Brugar: Entrepreneurship - Mary Beth Henning: How Should We Teach the Children?: A Response to the Production, Distribution, and Consumption Section - Daniel G. Krutka: Technology - Lance E. Mason: Media - Scott Alan Metzger: Cyber Salvation and the Necessity of Questioning: A Response to the Science, Technology, and Society Section - Kenneth T. Carano/Robert W. Bailey: Global - Dilys Schoorman/Rina Bousalis: Immigration - Cinthia Salinas/Melissa Rojas
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Williams: Crossing/Erasing Borders: A Response to the Global Connections Section -Rory P. Tannebaum: Discourse - Sarah E. Stanlick: Citizenship - Beth C. Rubin: Teaching Civics Amid New Discourses of Citizenship: A Response to the Civic Ideals and Practices Section - Walter C. Parker: Afterword: Keywords, Windows, and Content Selection - Contributors.
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Autoren-Porträt
Daniel G. Krutka is Assistant Professor of Social Studies Education at the University of North Texas. He earned his doctorate in instructional Leadership and academic Curriculum from the University of Oklahoma. Dan has published in numerous social studies and educational technology journals.Annie McMahon Whitlock is Assistant Professor of Elementary Education at the University of Michigan-Flint. She earned her doctorate in curriculum, instruction, and teacher education from Michigan State University. Annie has published journal articles on civic engagement, place-based inquiry, and curriculum integration.
Bibliographische Angaben
- 2018, XXXIV, 382 Seiten, Masse: 15,5 x 23,1 cm, Gebunden, Englisch
- Herausgegeben: Annie McMahon Whitlock, Mark Helmsing, Daniel G. Krutka
- Verlag: Peter Lang Ltd. International Academic Publishers
- ISBN-10: 1433156431
- ISBN-13: 9781433156434
- Erscheinungsdatum: 26.07.2018
Sprache:
Englisch
Pressezitat
"This collection of essays presents a rousing intellectual exercise to all who care about 'why teach this rather than that' in social studies. The approach is refreshingly comprehensive in an era when social studies is often reduced to just a few academic disciplines."-Stephen J. Thornton, Professor of Social Studies Education, University of South Florida; Author of Teaching Social Studies That Matters: Curriculum for Active Learning
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