Curriculum planning and development Books

1096 products


  • Arts Education in Action

    University of Illinois Press Arts Education in Action

    Book Synopsis

    £17.99

  • Music Education and Religion

    Indiana University Press Music Education and Religion

    Book SynopsisMusic, Education, and Religion: Intersections and Entanglements explores the critical role that religion can play in formal and informal music education. Trade ReviewThe book serves as a study volume for all those who are active in this field and provides both systematic reflections and useful empirical studies. A further impressive feature is the regional and religious breadth of the content presented and examined. -- Wolfgang W. Müller * Reading Religion *Table of ContentsIntroduction / Alexis Anja Kallio, Heidi Westerlund, and Philip AlpersonPart I: Tensions and Negotiations1. On the Role of Religion in Music Education / Estelle Jorgensen2. Selective Affinities: Concordance and Discordance at the Intersection of Musical, Educational, and Religious Practices / Philip Alperson3. The Performativity of Performance: Agency at the Intersection of Music and Religion in School / Heidi Westerlund, Alexis Anja Kallio and Heidi ParttiPart II: Identity and Community4. Shaping Identities in and through Religious Music Engagement: A Case Study of an Australian Catholic Girls' School / Janelle Colville Fletcher and Margaret S. Barrett5. Religion and the Transmission of Thai Musical Heritage, in Thailand and the United States of America / Pamela Moro6. The Believing-Belonging Paradigm: Music, Education, and Religion in Contemporary Serbia / Ivana Percoviç and Biljana Mandiç7. Religious Repertoire in General Music Education: Spiritual Indoctrination or Cultural Dialogue? / Lauri VäkeväPart III: Navigating New Worlds8. Mysterium Tremendum et Fascinans: Spiritual and Existential Experience and Music Education / Øivind Varkøy9. The Sacred Sphere: Its Equipment, Beauty, Functions, and Transformations under Secular Conditions / Maria B. Spychiger10. Music Education as Sacred Practice: A Philosophical Exploration / Frank Heuser11. Advocatus Diaboli: Revisiting the Devil's Role in Music and Music Education / Alexandra Kertz-WelzelPart IV: Emancipation, Regulation, and the Social Order12. The Humanist Defense of Music Education in Civil and Religious Life: The Praise of Musicke (1586) and Apologia Musices (1588) / Hyun-Ah Kim13. The Curious Case of "Good Morning Iran": Music and Broadcast Regulation in the Islamic Republic / Erum Naqvi14. When Hell Freezes Over—Black Metal: Emancipatory Cosmopolitanism and/or Egoistic Protectionism? / Ketil Thorgersen and Thomas von WachenfeldtPart V: Agency and Social Change15. Radical Musical Inclusion in Higher Education: The Creation of Foundation Music at the University of Winchester / June Boyce-Tillman16. Religious Identities Intersecting Higher Music Education: An Israeli Teacher Educator as a Boundary Worker in an All-Female Ultra-Orthodox Jewish Context / Laura Miettinen17. Religion and Music in an Education for Social Change / Iris M. Yob18. Dancing on the Limits: An Interreligious Dialogue Exploring the Lived Experience of Two Religiously Observant Music Educators in Israel / Belal Badarne and Amira EhrlichMusic, Education, and Religion: An Invitation / Alexis Anja KallioIndex

    £28.80

  • The Singing Irish

    University of Notre Dame Press The Singing Irish

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisIn The Singing Irish, Michael Alan Anderson brings to life the rich history and traditions of the Notre Dame Glee Club.Trade Review“One of the greatest assets we have here at Notre Dame is our Glee Club. Somehow, year in and year out, they come up with wonderful singers, great songs, and performances that are nothing short of fantastic. I don't know what we can do to thank the men for their long hours over the years that the Club puts into practicing for their performances. May I say that I am grateful for all of the wonderful performances of the Glee Club, not just here on campus but around the world. I have enjoyed many of their performances each year and I never cease to be edified by their spirit and wonderful presentation.” —Rev. Theodore Hesburgh, C.S.C. (1917–2015), President Emeritus of the University of Notre Dame“Glee Club alumnus Michael Alan Anderson has bravely and lovingly taken on the job of recording the history of this special group in The Singing Irish. In the first place, it is thoroughly researched and scrupulously verified from archives, articles, letters, yearbooks, newsletters, and reports. But more than that, its real goal has been to uncover the spirit underlying the facts of the story. The Notre Dame Glee Club is not just a trained and well-practiced group of university level students working in the field of music. It is a fellowship, a fraternity, of more or less ordinary young men who have been guided and shepherded as much as academically taught, accompanied on their way to maturity.” —Dorothy A. Pedtke, daughter of longtime Glee Club director Daniel H. Pedtke"Music historian Michael Anderson, a 1997 Notre Dame graduate and alumnus of the Glee Club, says the tradition of the club, along with the timing of the centennial, inspired him to write the club's history. . . . The group was primarily influenced by three directors, Daniel Pedtke, current director [Daniel] Stowe, and Joseph Casasanta, who wrote such favorites as the Alma Mater and 'Hike Notre Dame.' Two-thirds of the group's 100 years were under the leadership of one of these three men, Anderson says." —South Bend Tribune: In the Bend“Impressively well written, beautifully illustrated, informed and informative, The Singing Irish: A History of the Notre Dame Glee Club is a delight to simply browse through and should be considered a ‘must’ for all Notre Dame alumni. A unique contribution, The Singing Irish is strongly recommended for academic library Music History reference collections. It should also be noted for personal reading lists that The Singing Irish is also available (enhanced with audio and video) in a Kindle edition.” —The Midwest Book Review"We, the alumni of Our Lady's University, have been blessed by being able to listen to and enjoy the beautiful voices coming from the Notre Dame Glee Club. This book is a 'must read' for all Notre Dame alums and friends of the university. You will feel the spirit of The Singing Irish because it reflects the soul of the Notre Dame Glee Club throughout the group's first one hundred years. Michael Anderson has captured the essence of what makes this group so memorable for its members and for its audiences around the world. Let the music flow as you turn the pages." —Charles "Chuck" Lennon ('61, '62MA, DL H'11)

    1 in stock

    £26.59

  • The Course Syllabus

    John Wiley & Sons Inc The Course Syllabus

    2 in stock

    Book SynopsisWhen it was first published in 1997, The Course Syllabus became the gold standard reference for both new and experienced college faculty. Like the first edition, this book is based on a learner-centered approach. Because faculty members are now deeply committed to engaging students in learning, the syllabus has evolved into a useful, if lengthy, document. Today''s syllabus provides details about course objectives, requirements and expectations, and also includes information about teaching philosophies, specific activities and the rationale for their use, and tools essential to student success.Table of ContentsForeword xi Preface xiii Acknowledgments xvii The Authors xix Part I: Focus On Learning Preparing Students 3 Setting a Framework for Knowledge 4 Planning Your Learning-Centered Syllabus: An Overview of the Process 13 Composing a Learning-Centered Syllabus 21 Using a Learning-Centered Syllabus 34 Part II: Examples Checklist 39 Table of Contents 40 Instructor Information 41 Student Information Form 43 Letter to the Students or Teaching Philosophy Statement 44 Purpose of the Course 49 Course Description 51 Course Objectives 54 Readings 63 Resources 65 Course Calendar 67 Course Requirements 71 Policies and Expectations: Attendance, Late Papers, Missed Tests, Class Behaviors, and Civility 77 Policies and Expectations: Academic Integrity, Disability Access, and Safety 87 Evaluation 92 Grading Procedures 98 How to Succeed in the Course: Tools for Study and Learning 102 Part III: Suggested Readings General Teaching 111 Active Learning 112 Assessment and Evaluation 113 Cooperative and Collaborative Learning 113 Course and Curriculum Design 114 Critical Thinking 115 Information Technology 115 Learning and Motivation 116 Student Differences 116 Online Resources for Syllabus Construction 118 Teaching Portfolios 118 References 121 Index 127

    2 in stock

    £26.60

  • The Unplanned Lesson

    The University of Michigan Press The Unplanned Lesson

    Book SynopsisSuggests a new paradigm for how to prepare for and conduct language lessons based on curating what the authors term ‘structures’. By focusing on structures that are flexible, evolvable, repeatable, and memorable, teachers can reduce the amount of time they spend planning and increase the amount of time students are engaged in deliberate practice.Table of Contents SECTION 1: Why to use structure-based teaching 1. A perfect plan? 2. The hidden power of structures 3. Creation through combination SECTION 2: How to use structure-based teaching 1. 50 FERM structures 2. Structures to check for understanding 3. Structure evolutions 4. Sample structure flows Bibliography

    £23.70

  • Language Education in the National Curriculum

    John Wiley and Sons Ltd Language Education in the National Curriculum

    Book SynopsisLanguage education in the National Curriculum is an introduction in all aspects of language work in the National Curriculum. Written in the wake of seemingly permanent revolution in educational policy, it is the first to offer a considered analysis of change, a critique of policy, and a guide to good practice for teachers.Trade Review"This is a most impressive collection, and is destined to become a point of reference for many years to come. The papers are all intelligently edited into a cohesive whole and are a rich source of Information on thoery and practice inlanguage education. There is no other book on this topic." Ron Carter, Nottingham University, UK.Table of ContentsLanguage in the curriculum, Christopher Brumfit; the National Curriculum as language policy, Rosamond Mitchell; English teaching - language, literacy and learning, Christopher Brumfit; reading to learn, Virginia Kelly; literature teaching and the National Curriculum, Michael Benton; drama in education, Kate Armes; media education and the secondary English curriculum; bilingual learners - community languages and Engish, Christopher Brumfit and Rosamond Mitchell; the first foreign language, Michael Grenfell; other foreign languages., Melanie Smith; language awareness, Janet hooper; language after 16, George Blue.

    £38.90

  • Higher Expectations  Can Colleges Teach Students

    Princeton University Press Higher Expectations Can Colleges Teach Students

    7 in stock

    Book SynopsisTrade Review"One of Forbes' Best Higher Education Books of 2020""A useful though eminently debatable case for reform in the interest of teaching to today’s needs." * Kirkus Reviews *"In this highly readable and engaging book, he delineates how colleges can better prepare students to gain the skills and develop the habits of mind necessary to succeed in life, especially in a fast-moving, knowledge-based society. . . . Highly recommended for college faculty and administrators, and anyone interested in how college students can find meaning and purpose in life." * Library Journal *"Higher Expectations provides a helpful guide for those who hope to fortify and reform this dwindling but essential collection of institutions. Bok’s vision of the purposes of higher education is unlikely to become the official state religion, but it could serve as a beautiful hymnal in dissenting churches."---Jay P. Greene, Education Next

    7 in stock

    £34.20

  • Handbook of the Undergraduate Curriculum

    John Wiley & Sons Inc Handbook of the Undergraduate Curriculum

    2 in stock

    Book SynopsisA Publication of the Association of American Colleges and Universities Top practitioners and scholars detail a range of philosophies, frameworks, program designs, instructional strategies, and assessment methods being used to strengthen and transform the curriculum.Trade Review?This book is a feast of current thinking, which is exactly how faculty--who come to the table with many different viewpoints and interests--need to be served.? (Russell Edgerton, president, American Association for Higher Education) "Breathtakingly comprehensive in its reach--from the history and philosophy of the curriculum to administration and assessment." (The Review of Higher Education) ?If policy makers, administrators, and faculty will use this book to create common ground for discussion, we might succeed in making the necessary reforms in undergraduate education that will allow students to meet the future competently.This book will become an essential tool for any department, college, or campus wanting to make significant change in undergraduate education.? (Reba L. Keele, professor of management, founding dean of undergraduate studies, University of Utah) ?This book is a feast of current thinking, which is exactly how faculty--who come to the table with many different viewpoints and interests--need to be served.? (Russell Edgerton, president, American Association for Higher Education) ?Jerry Gaff and Jim Ratcliff have gathered a diverse and informed group of contributors to present an amazingly comprehensive source concerning undergraduate curriculum. It should be of great value to anyone involved with college curriculum.? (Robert H. McCabe, senior league fellow, MacArthur Fellow, president emeritus, Miami-Dade Community College, League for Innovation in the Community College Education) ?This volume reflects the excitement and the significance of current changes and issues in the college curriculum. It will be an essential resource for anyone even tangentially involved in academic change today.? (Daryl G. Smith, professor of education and psychology, Claremont Graduate School, Claremont, California)Table of ContentsHISTORICAL, PHILOSOPHICAL, AND SOCIAL PERSPECTIVES. What Is a Curriculum and What Should It Be? (J. Ratcliff). Institutional Contexts (E. Hawthorne). Key Turning Points in the Evolving Curriculum (A. Levine & J. Nidiffer). Philosophies and Aims (B. Fuhrmann). Structures and Practices (P. Hutcheson). Social Forces Shaping the Curriculum (M. Garcia & J. Ratcliff). CENTRAL AIMS OF UNDERGRADUATE EDUCATION. Quality and Coherence in General Education (J. Ratcliff). Developing Intellectual Skills (A. Doherty, et al.). Diversity and Educational Integrity (C. Musil). Strengthening Preparedness of At-Risk Students (D. McGrath & B. Townsend). ACADEMIC DISCIPLINES AND SPECIALIZED LEARNING. The Arts and Sciences Major (C. Schneider). The Humanities (L. White). The Natural Sciences and Mathematics (G. Wubbels & J. Girgus). The Social Sciences (A. Hendershott & S. Wright). The Arts (E. Harris). Professional Education (L. Curry & J. Wergin). Occupational Education (D. Clowes). DIRECTIONS FOR REFORM ACROSS THE DISCIPLINES. Teaching "Across the Curriculum" (E. Maimon). Advancing Interdisciplinary Studies (J. Klein & W. Newell). Internationalizing the Curriculum (J. Johnston & J. Spalding). Transforming the Curriculum Through Diversity (E. Olguin & B. Schmitz). Creating Learning Communities (R. Matthews, et al.). Using Technology (J. Farmer). ADMINISTRATION AND ASSESSMENT OF THE CURRICULUM. Administering the Curriculum (F. Janzow, et al.). Building Academic Community While Containing Costs (M. Reardon & J. Ramaley). Achieving Effectiveness and Efficiency (A. Ferren). Promoting Coherence in Transfer Practices (J. Eaton). Evaluating Learning in Individual Courses (B. Wright). Assessing Learning in Programs (D. Farmer & E. Napieralski). Identifying Indicators of Curricular Quality (P. Ewell). CHANGING THE CURRICULUM. Strategies for Change (J. Lindquist). Implementing Change (J. Civian, et al.). Supporting Curriculum Development (G. Sell & B. Lounsberry). Tensions Between Tradition and Innovation (J. Gaff).

    2 in stock

    £76.50

  • The Bases of Competence  Skills for Lifelong

    John Wiley & Sons Inc The Bases of Competence Skills for Lifelong

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisTrade Review"The Bases of Competence provides educators and employers with the tools they need to create practical, valuable learning experiences for those they instruct and lead.... The arguments are well presented, and people in higher education will find much to agree with in this book." --The Journal of Academic Leadership "This book should be required reading for curriculum committees throughout higher education and will be of interest to higher education faculty, administrators, and graduate students in a wide variety of areas." --Choice "The Bases of Competence makes a valuable contribution to the dialogue on one of the most vital issues of our time: how to educate people for a rapidly changing workplace and society. Better skills are what the authors call for, but not the rote, rudimentary, tactile skills of old. Rather, intellectual skills--communicating, managing self, managing people and tasks in order to mobilize for innovation and change--are needed in this new information age." --Richard O. Mason, director, Maguire Center for Ethics and Public Responsibility, Southern Methodist University "The Bases of Competence is essential reading for executives and managers concerned about the effective preparation of the next generation of entrants to the workforce. It is the source for anyone who needs to know what specific skills the new economy demands of university graduates, as well as how to nurture these capabilities." --Douglas T. Hall, director, Executive Development Roundtable, and professor, organizational behavior, Boston University School of Management "The Bases of Competence presents concrete examples as to how higher education can reengineer the learning environment to expose students to the specific behavioral skills that they will need in order to cope and succeed in the world of business. Mandatory reading for educators interested in making the transition from traditional learning to skills-based education." --Steve Williams, director, Graduate Business Programs, Harding UniversityTable of ContentsUNDERSTANDING COMPETENCE. The Humbling Effect: Moving from College to the Workplace. Creating a Common Language about Competence. ESSENTIAL SKILLS AND COMPETENCIES. Managing Self. Communicating. Managing People and Tasks. Mobilizing Innovation and Change. DEVELOPING COMPETENCE. Closing the Gap Between Campuses and Workplaces. Fostering Workplace Skills in the College Curriculum. Building on Collegiate Learning in the Workplace. CASE STUDIES. Teaching World of Work Skills Within a Degree Program: Ontario Agricultural College (A. Auger). Listening to the Customer: External Assessment of Competencies at Babson College (J. Weintraub, et al.). Cultivating Competence to Sustain Competitive Advantage: The Bank of Montreal (J. Logan). Resource: Making the Match Year 3 Questionnaires (Skill Sections) for Students, Graduates, and Managers.

    1 in stock

    £32.29

  • Shaping the College Curriculum

    John Wiley & Sons Inc Shaping the College Curriculum

    Book SynopsisShaping the College Curriculum focuses on curriculum development as an important decision-making process in colleges and universities. The authors define curriculum as an academic plan developed in a historical, social, and political context.Table of ContentsPreface xiii The Authors xix 1 Curriculum: An Academic Plan 1 The Need for a Definitional Framework 2 Defining Curriculum as an Academic Plan 4 Contextual Influences on Academic Plans 11 Constructing Plans: Curriculum Development 15 Evolution of the Academic Plan Concept 16 Advantages of the Academic Plan Model 20 2 External Influences: Sociocultural Context 23 Patterns of Curriculum Debate 25 Evolving Educational Purposes 26 Debating General Education and Specialization 30 Learners: An Emphasis on Access 36 Content Debates: Prescription vs. Choice 45 Instructional Process: Occasional Innovations 52 Evaluation Debates: Emphasis on Quality Control 57 Influences and Potential Reforms 64 3 Internal Influences: College and University Contexts 65 Institutional Influences 67 Unit-Level Influences 77 Emerging Internal Influences 83 Converging Influences 87 4 Internal Influences: Academic Fields 89 Characterizing Academic Fields 91 Differences in Course Planning 93 Seeking Academic Community 101 Building on the Strengths of Academic Fields 111 5 Creating Academic Plans 115 Course Planning 116 Program Planning 127 College-Wide Planning 132 Systematic Design Models 135 Sharing Responsibility for Curriculum Design 143 6 Learners 145 Learner Influences on Course Planning 147 Learner Influences on Program Planning 151 Learner Influences on College Planning 152 Multiple Perspectives on Learning 153 Learners and Learning Processes 159 Understandings of Learning and Knowledge 168 Learning in Academic Fields 174 Considering Learners in Curriculum Design 179 7 Instructional Processes 183 Teaching Styles 184 Contextual Influences on Courses and Programs 187 Expanding Choices Among Instructional Processes 191 Teaching for Intentional Learning 212 Reflecting on Planning and Teaching 225 8 Evaluating and Adjusting Academic Plans 229 Defining Evaluation and Assessment 231 Evaluating and Adjusting Course Plans 235 Evaluating and Adjusting Program Plans 248 College-Wide Evaluation 257 Evaluating Evaluation 266 Responding to Accountability Demands 267 9 Administering Academic Plans 269 Curriculum Leadership and Administrative Roles 275 10 Models and Strategies for Curricular Change 301 Evolution, Adaptation, and Strategic Change 302 Scope of Curricular Change 304 Models of Change 305 Using Multiple Strategies for Curricular Change 318 Learning to Change in Academic Organizations 322 Maintaining Change 327 Academic Plans in Context 329 References 331 Names Index 359 Subject Index 367

    £42.75

  • The Battleground of the Curriculum Liberal

    Stanford University Press The Battleground of the Curriculum Liberal

    Book SynopsisThis book examines the current debates about the curriculum in historical context and offers considerations for the future.Trade Review"An excellent contribution to the debates on the university dominating American education today. The author provides an incisive, objective analysis of the conflict over liberal education's place and function in the university curriculum. A chronological approach is used to examine the continuous crises and curricular wars over liberal education's role." -- Choice"Required reading for any citizen seriously concerned about the role of higher education in a democratic society." * Stanley N. Katz *Table of ContentsContents I. II. III. IV. V. VI. VII. VIII. IX. Appendix.

    £18.89

  • InsideOutside  Teacher Research and Knowledge

    John Wiley & Sons InsideOutside Teacher Research and Knowledge

    Book SynopsisSurveys and analyses teacher research, arguing that pedagogical knowledge is generated ""outside-in"", that is, from the university to be applied in schools. Contributors explore the meaning and significance of the teachers' researches and findings.

    £22.79

  • Educating for Intelligent Belief or Unbelief

    John Wiley & Sons Educating for Intelligent Belief or Unbelief

    Book SynopsisAn enduring issue in American education concerns the place of individual beliefs and moral standards in the classroom. Noddings argues that public schools should address the questions that teenagers raise about the nature, value and meaning of life, and should do so across the curriculum.

    £17.09

  • Developing Constructivist Early Childhood Curric

    John Wiley & Sons Developing Constructivist Early Childhood Curric

    Book SynopsisThis work provides a constructivist interpretation of developmentally appropriate curriculum in early childhood education. It provides the theoretical rationale and the practical advice for conducting specific activities in the classroom.

    £23.74

  • The Computer Clubhouse  Constructionism and

    John Wiley & Sons The Computer Clubhouse Constructionism and

    Book SynopsisThe Computer Clubhouse makes an important contribution not just in the local communities but also as a model for after-school learning environments. This book deals with the Computer Clubhouse - the idea and the place - that inspires youth to think about themselves as competent, creative, and critical learners.

    £22.79

  • Connecting Emergent Curriculum and Standards in

    £22.79

  • Critical Media Pedagogy  Teaching for Achievement

    John Wiley & Sons Critical Media Pedagogy Teaching for Achievement

    Book SynopsisExamines how teaching media in high school English and social studies classrooms can address major challenges in our educational system. The authors argue that, in addition to providing underserved youth with access to 21st-century learning technologies, critical media education will help improve academic literacy achievement in city schools.

    £24.69

  • Teaching Civic Literacy Projects  Student

    Teachers' College Press Teaching Civic Literacy Projects Student

    Book SynopsisThis practical resource shows teachers how to enact robust forms of civic education in today’s schools. Both instructive and thought-provoking, it will inspire teachers to craft curricula addressing a wide range of genuine civic problems such as those related to racial discrimination, environmental damage, and community health.

    £29.45

  • Whole School Projects  Engaging Imaginations

    £32.26

  • UnStandardizing Curriculum  Multicultural

    John Wiley & Sons UnStandardizing Curriculum Multicultural

    Book SynopsisShows how educators can learn to teach rich, academically rigorous, multicultural curricula within a standards-based environment. The authors have meticulously updated each chapter to address current changes in education policy and practice. New vignettes of classroom practice have been added to illustrate how today's teachers navigate the Common Core State Standards.

    £32.36

  • Whats Worth Teaching  Rethinking Curriculum in

    Teachers' College Press Whats Worth Teaching Rethinking Curriculum in

    Book SynopsisRenowned cognitive scientist Allan Collins proposes a school curriculum that will fit the needs of our modern era. Examining how advances in technology, communication, and the dissemination of information are reshaping the world, Collins offers guidelines to help schools foster flexible, self-directed learners who will succeed in the global workplace.

    £27.54

  • Integrating the Visual Arts Across the Curriculu

    Teachers' College Press Integrating the Visual Arts Across the Curriculu

    Book SynopsisShows how asking questions and posing problems spark curiosity and encourage learners to think deeply and make meaningful connections across the curriculum. At the centre of this approach is creativity, with contemporary visual art as its inspiration.Table of Contents Foreword by Connie Stewart Preface Acknowledgments PART I: Foundations of Creative Inquiry 1 Learning Through Creative Art-Based Inquiry Creative Art-Based Inquiry Learning The First Grade Community Inquiry Other Key Aspects of the Creative Inquiry Approach 2 Curriculum Integration Through Creative Inquiry The Disciplines: Overlaps, Intersections, and Hybrids Curriculum Integration Art as an Integrative Discipline Art and Integrated Creative Inquiry PART II: The Academic Disciplines and Related Art 3 The Natural Sciences: Understanding the Natural World Four Dimensions of the Natural Sciences Comparing Science and Art Examples of Art That Explore Cross-Cutting Concepts Examples of Art Inspired by Science Integrating Science and Art in the Classroom 4 Mathematics: Logic and Abstraction Meets Application and Aesthetics Four Dimensions of Mathematics Intersection of Math and Art Examples of Art Inspired by Concepts in Math Integrating Math and Art in the Classroom 5 Social Studies: Understanding Ourselves and Others Four Dimensions of Social Studies Intersection of Social Studies and Art Examples of Art Exploring Concepts in Social Studies Integrating Art and Social Studies in the Classroom 6 Language Arts: Creative Writing and Storytelling Four Dimensions of Creative Writing Kinds of Stories Art That Tells Stories Literacy Through Visual Art PART III: Art-Based Strategies for Creative Inquiry 7 Learning Strategies for Creative Inquiry Kinds of Creative Thinking Creative Strategies in Contemporary Art Strategies for Thinking, Inquiry, and Learning The Research Workbook 8 Frameworks and Strategies for Curriculum and Pedagogy Utilizing the Project Zero Frameworks Creative Curriculum Development 9 Inquiry Trails: Examples of Creative Inquiry-Based Art Integration Patterns and Mathematics in Natural Forms Animal Structures and Architecture An Imaginary Island World Medicinal Plant to Treat a Social Issue or Problem Me and My World Concluding Remarks References Index About the Author and the Contributors

    £25.64

  • The Creative Classroom  Innovative Teaching for

    Teachers' College Press The Creative Classroom Innovative Teaching for

    Book SynopsisPresents an original, compelling vision of schools where teaching and learning are centred on creativity. Drawing on the latest research and his studies of jazz and improvised theatre, Sawyer describes curricula and classroom practices that will help educators get started with a new style of teaching - guided improvisation.Table of Contents Foreword Tony Wagner Acknowledgments 1. Introduction Teaching Creative Knowledge 2. Teaching Creative Knowledge Creative Knowledge and Shallow Knowledge Moving Beyond the Coverage Trap The Noisy Library: Learning Creativity and State Standards Creative Habits of Mind Creative Knowledge in Math, Science, and History Teaching for Creativity in Every Subject 3. Guided Improvisation Learning to Improvise Improvisation is an Ensemble Art Improv Techniques for Teachers When Teachers Need to Break the Rules Lesson Planning for Guided Improvisation Scaffolding: Balancing Structure and Improvisation Summary 4. Mastering the Teaching Paradox Scaffolding: The Structures of Guided Improvisation Project-Based Learning and the Teaching Paradox Different Balances of Structure and Improvisation From Novice Teacher to Expert Improviser Pedagogical Content Knowledge Conclusion 5. Schools for creativity What Creative Schools Look Like A Case Study: Keels Elementary Conclusion 6. A Call to Action References Index About the Author

    £68.40

  • Collaborative Lesson Study ReVisioning Teacher

    Teachers' College Press Collaborative Lesson Study ReVisioning Teacher

    Book SynopsisThis resource empowers readers to oppose reform efforts that minimize teacher agency by offering an evidence-based approach to teacher-led instructional improvement. The text provides structures for attending to students' interests, knowledge, and values when planning, teaching, reflecting, and revising instruction.Table of Contents Foreword Ellin Oliver Keene Introduction Lesson Study in a Turnaround School An Overview of Lesson Study Impact of Lesson Study on Student Learning About This Book Note PART I: LESSON STUDY AS RESPONSIVE PROFESSIONAL LEARNING 1. Engaging in Lesson Study: Risk-Taking, Resilience, and ReVisioning Perpetual Motion: Unrelenting Improvement of Teaching and Learning Risk and Reward: Professional Growth through Lesson Study Valuing Teaching and Teachers Context Matters Reflect and Respond 2. Challenging Norms of Privacy and Isolation Benefits of Collaboration Challenges to Collaboration Shared Expectations Supporting, Scheduling, and Sustaining the Work Overcoming Privacy and Isolation Reflect and Respond 3. Lesson Study as Contextualized Learning Why Context Matters Lesson Study in Varying Contexts Supporting a Positive Culture for Teaching Reflect and Respond PART II: LAYERS OF THE LESSON STUDY PROCESS 4. Purposeful Planning: Teachers as Designers Collective Agency and Innovation Creating a Vision for the Lesson Predictive Planning Reflect and Respond 5. Observation: The Eyes Have It Another Pair of Eyes Before the Observation The Observation: Seeing with New Eyes Reflect and Respond 6. Debrief: Deep Reflection and Lesson ReVisioning A Disposition for Reflection Reflection Starts with Description Re Visioning through Appraising and Appreciating Re Visioning Teaching and Learning Reflect and Respond PART III: REFINING THE FOCUS 7. Building Understanding What is Understanding? Supporting Student Understanding Developing Teacher Understanding Reflect and Respond 8. Flexibility Teaching Requires Cognitive Flexibility Flexibility vs. the Perfect Lesson Plan Flexibility as a Focus for Lesson Study Increased Flexibility Reflect and Respond 9. Supporting Responsiveness Cultural Responsiveness Contextual Responsiveness Responsiveness to Individual Lives and Interests Responsiveness to Students' Learning Needs Responsiveness to Teachers' Needs Understanding, Flexibility, and Responsiveness Reflect and Respond Conclusion: Ongoing Cycles of Lesson Study Variations and Iterations Dispositions ReVisioning Through Lesson Study Reflect and Respond Appendix A: Agenda for Introducing Lesson Study Appendix B: Planning Our Lesson Appendix C: Observation Day Agenda Appendix D: Videos for Observation Practice Appendix E: Before and After Lesson Study Plans Appendix F: Student Interest Inventory References Index About the Author

    £25.64

  • Transformative Ethnic Studies in Schools

    John Wiley & Sons Transformative Ethnic Studies in Schools

    Book SynopsisThis compelling book conceptualizes Ethnic Studies not only as a vehicle to transform and revitalize the school curriculum but also as a way to reinvent teaching. Drawing on Sleeter's research review on the impact of Ethnic Studies, the authors show how the traditional curriculum's Eurocentric view of the world affects diverse student populations.Table of Contents Contents Series Foreword James A. Banks vii Acknowledgments xiii 1. What Is All This Fuss About Ethnic Studies? 1 A Story of Schooling and the Legacies of Colonialism 1 Ethnic Studies as a Decolonizing, Unfinished Project 4 Epistemic Privilege: Propelling the Movement Forward 5 Ethnic Studies in Our Schools 6 Hallmarks of Ethnic Studies 7 Overview of This Book 17 Joining the Struggle for Ethnic Studies 17 2. Mainstream Curriculum as (Multicultural) White Studies 23 Whose Viewpoint Structures Curriculum? A Contested Domain 24 What Do Current Curriculum Analyses Find? 27 Assumptions Embedded Within (Multicultural) White Studies 36 Students’ Perspectives 38 Conclusion 43 3. What the Research Says About Ethnic Studies 44 Academic and Personal Impact on Students of Color 45 Ethnic Studies for Diverse Groups That Include White Students 62 Conclusion 67 4. Ethnic Studies Curriculum as Counter-Narrative 69 Ethnic Studies as a Conceptual Approach 69 Ethnic Studies in Early Childhood 72 Black Studies in High School 76 Native American Studies 79 Ethnic Studies with Diverse Students 84 Youth Participatory Action Research and Ethnic Studies 90 Conclusion 93 5. Ethnic Studies Teachers’ Reflections on Their Praxis 95 Ethnic Studies Teachers 96 Identity as Central to Teaching 97 Foundational Values 99 Key Challenges 107 Conclusion 112 6. Research and the Movement for Ethnic Studies 113 Uses of Research in the Growing Movement for Ethnic Studies 114 Ethnic Studies Advocates 115 The Role of Research in Ethnic Studies Advocacy 116 Challenges 123 Sustainable Research and Advocacy 128 Looking Toward the Future 130 References 134 Index 149 About the Authors 162

    £24.69

  • Teaching for a Living Democracy  ProjectBased

    John Wiley & Sons Teaching for a Living Democracy ProjectBased

    Book SynopsisExplores how teachers can build and sustain an intellectually and emotionally fulfilling teaching practice while changing the way students experience school. The book presents a framework of teaching for a living democracy - supporting learners to produce intellectually creative work by designing instruction that intersects with students' lives.Table of Contents Foreword Acknowledgments 1. Reframing School Learning Teaching for a Living Democracy Changing the Grammar of Schooling My Teaching Context and Background Agency and Possibility 2. Designing Curriculum for Deeper Learning Immigration Oral History Projects Advanced Essay Process Modern Day de Tocquevilles 3. Elevating Student Voices and Truths Acknowledging and Honoring Students' Realities Bulding Cohesive Classroom Communities Making Learning Complex and Real Prioritizing Student Voices, Decentralizing the Classroom 4. Envisioning New Roles for Teachers Reframing Teacher Voice Teachers as Facilitators Teachers as Lead Collaborators Teachers as Consultants and Scholars 5. Decolonizing School Insights from Aotearoa, New Zealand Biculturalism and Creating Space in Schools The Re-PLACE-ing Project Our Philadelphia, Our America 6. Engaging Multiple Realities of Teaching   for a Living Democracy Art in the Open The Messy Process of Creation Navigating Intolerance Engaging Issues of the World Epilogue: For Teachers Appendix: Additional Classroom Resources References Index About the Author

    £26.59

  • Teacher as Curator  Formative Assessment and

    Teachers' College Press Teacher as Curator Formative Assessment and

    Book SynopsisProvides a roadmap for using creative strategies to engage both educators and students in the learning process. Focusing on key qualities of culturally and linguistically responsive arts learning, chapters specifically demonstrate how arts integration strategies and formative assessment can be a catalyst for change in the classroom.Table of Contents Contents (Tentative) Foreword  Beth Lambert vii Preface ix Acknowledgments xi Introduction: Arts-Integrated Learning and Creativity 1 Creativity in Our Schools 1 Arts Integration 4 Arts as a Means of Formative Assessment 7 Influence of Pedagogical Research 9 Blending Theory and Practice: A Journey Through This Book 11 1. A New Lens for Assessment 13 Reframing Assessment 13 Authentic Assessment 15 Reflective Practice 19 Creative Assessment Linked with the Arts 21 Instructional Design 24 We Are the Change 25 2. Culturally Relevant Arts Teaching, Learning, and Assessment 28 What Is Culturally Relevant Teaching? 29 A Focus on Diverse Students  32 Arts and Culturally Responsive Teaching and Learning 34 Reflecting on Practice 38 Creating a Positive Environment for Learning 38 3. Teacher as Curator 43 The Art of Curation 43 Building Curation Skills 49 Curation as Part of Formative Assessment  50 4. Deepening the Lesson Plan 56 Lesson Planning 56 Lesson Design 61 Eight Curatorial Lenses for Reviewing and Deepening a Lesson Plan 71 Reclaiming Lesson Plans 78 5. Curation Maps: Tracing the Journey  80 Activating the Curation and Mapping Process 81 Understanding the Curation Map 84 Creating Curation Maps 89 Curation Leads to Insight 104 6. Learning Stories: Voices from the Field 106 The Learning Story 106 Story Examples from Teachers  110 Final Thoughts 132 7. Creative Assessment Strategies 134 Strategy 1: Altered Text  135 Strategy 2: Collage 139 Strategy 3: Dialogue Poem 144 Strategy 4: Movement Phrase 148 Strategy 5: Role-Play  154 Strategy 6: Soundscape 160 Strategy 7: Storyboard 165 Strategy 8: Tableau  170 Conclusion 179 The Arts as Verbs in the Classroom 180 The Artistry of Teaching 180 Key Nuggets 181 Meaningful Learning Experiences 182 References 185 Index 197 About the Authors 207

    £24.69

  • Schools Reimagined  Unifying the Science of

    John Wiley & Sons Schools Reimagined Unifying the Science of

    Book SynopsisMakes the case that now is a timely moment to reimagine schools and put the intellectual and social-emotional health of students and teachers at the centre of the educational process. This book will help administrators and teachers to structure their settings in ways that maximize the likelihood of meaningful and enduring student learning.Table of Contents Contents Foreword Michael Fullan  ix Preface xi Acknowledgments xv Part I: Making the Case for Constructivist Schools 1. Imagining Schools as...3 A Simple Proposition 3 Implications for Schooling 5 Paradigm Shift 7 Information or Knowledge? 8 Meaningful Work 11 Tracking Worthy Outcomes 11 At a Crossroad 13 Every Classroom a Journey 14 2. Transforming Schools From the Inside Out 17 Preschoolers Take a Nature Walk 17 Elementary School Students Simulate an Oil Spill Cleanup 20 Middle Schoolers Respond to a Global Challenge 22 High Schoolers Become Stewards of Water Quality 25 Undergraduates Include Social Justice in Studies of the Changing Earth 27 Teachers Transform Their Practice 28 3. Searching for Meaning 31 Making Sense of Things 31 Our Personal Pantheon 33 Wiring and Firing 42 Opening New Doors to Self-Regulation 44 Images of Learners 46 Part II: Guiding Principles 4. Tying the Learning Frameworks Together 51 Math: What Boats and Medicines Can Teach Us 52 Science: What Ants Can Teach Us 54 Social Studies: What Huckleberries Can Teach Us 56 Literacy: What Artifacts Can Teach Us 58 The Arts: What Windy Days Can Teach Us 60 Language, Libraries, Health: What Rocks and Water Can Teach Us 61 Embedding the “What,” Guiding the “How,” Providing a “Why” 65 5. Framing Curricula and Teaching Around Big Ideas 69 Big Ideas and Points of View 70 Negotiating Curricula 72 Just-in-Time Teaching 73 Content–Process Dynamic 74 Posing Problems of Emerging Relevance 79 6. Fostering the Development of Reasoning With Design Thinking 83 Models of Design Thinking 83 Failing Forward 85 Innovating With Design Thinking 86 Design Challenges 89 Teaching With Design Challenges 91 7. Deepening Reasoning With Transdisciplinary Strategies 97 1. Ordering Learning Experiences 98 2. Hearing the Questions Students Hear 100 3. Offering Time to Think 101 4. Seeking Elaboration 102 5. Facilitating the Search for Patterns 103 6. Valuing Evidence 104 7. Connecting Students With Each Other 106 8. Posing Targeted Questions 107 9. Appreciating Context 108 10. Cultivating a Sense of Place 109 11. Supporting Student Agency 110 12. Navigating Error 111 8. Responsibly Assessing Student Learning 115 The Perils of Grading 116 Data Versus Evidence 117 Connecting Teaching to Assessing 118 Assessment That Generates Student Thinking 120 Performance Assessment 123 Responsible Assessment 124 Changing the Narrative 126 Part III: Stepping up and Speaking Out 9. Shifting Norms and Structures 131 Visioning and Valuing 131 Establishing a Culture of Learning 133 Aligning Curricula 134 Collaborating With Parents 135 Differentiating for Equity 136 Considering Space and Time and Technology 138 School as a Concept 140 10. Moving to the Next Level of Work 143 Why 144 How 146 For Whom 147 References 151 Index 163 About the Authors 173

    £24.69

  • Moral Education for Social Justice

    John Wiley & Sons Moral Education for Social Justice

    Book SynopsisAddresses issues of social justice through the regular curriculum and everyday school life. This book illustrates an approach that integrates social justice education with contemporary research on students' development of moral understandings and concerns for human welfare in order to address societal conventions, norms, and institutions.

    £88.00

  • Teaching Difficult Histories in Difficult Times

    John Wiley & Sons Teaching Difficult Histories in Difficult Times

    Book SynopsisDespite limitations and challenges, teaching about difficult histories is an essential aspect of social studies courses and units across grade levels. This practical resource highlights stories of K-12 practitioners who have critically examined and reflected on their experiences with planning and teaching histories identified as difficult.Table of Contents Contents Foreword Cinthia Salinas ix Introduction: Framing Difficult Histories 1 Lauren McArthur Harris, Maia Sheppard, and Sara A. Levy PART I: CENTERING DIFFICULT HISTORY CONTENT 13 1.  Representing Difficult History Through Images and Narratives With Museum Partners: Learning and Teaching at the 9/11 Memorial & Museum 15 Rebecca L. Rosen, Kevin W. Meuwissen, Megan C. Jones, and Jennifer M. Lagasse 2.  Rethinking the Teaching of Black History: Teachers, Students, and the Development of a Black History and Literature Course Using a Black Historical Consciousness Framework 28 Gregory Simmons, LaGarrett J. King, and Mary Adu-Gyamfi 3.  Teaching About the Nanjing Safety Zone to Introduce Human Rights 41 Jing A. Williams, Christian D. Pirlet, and Mary Johnson PART II: CENTERING TEACHER AND STUDENT IDENTITIES 53 4.  "Step by Courageous Step": A Preservice Teacher's Understanding of the Story of Ona Judge 55 Amanda E. Vickery, Shalicia Hobby, and Marquita Foster 5.  Pacific Learners, Identity, and Difficult Histories: A New Zealand Case Study 68 Bronwyn Houliston 6.  Perpetual War as Difficult History: Teaching Against Militarism and for Peace 80 Scott T. Glew 7.  Teaching the Holocaust: A Search for Its Redemptive Value 90 Doran Katz PART III: CENTERING LOCAL AND COMMUNITY CONTEXTS 103 8.  From Praying Towns to the National Day of Mourning: Centering Indigenous Peoples' Survivance and Resistance Within American History 105 Taylor Collins and Christopher C. Martell 9.  "When People Stay Silent, It Looks Like Newberry Is the Only One With This Problem": Confronting the Difficult History of Racial Violence in an African American History Course 117 Elizabeth Yeager Washington, Catherine G. Atria, Jordan Marlowe, and Christina Aulino 10.  Comparing Historical Injustices: The Possibilities and Challenges of Teaching Multiple Injustices From an Anticolonial Perspective 129 James Miles and Rosie Thind 11.  The Paradoxical Qualities of Teaching Difficult History 142 Tyler Moon and H. James (Jim) Garrett PART IV: CENTERING TEACHER DECISION-MAKING 153 12.  "The 13th Amendment, It Don't Say That We Kings": Teaching the History of Mass Incarceration and Criminal Justice Reform Through Hip-Hop Pedagogy 155 Kelly R. Allen 13.  Teaching Difficult Histories of Immigration at the Elementary Level 167 Tara Rich and Sohyun An 14.  "If You're Not Talking About Those Things, You're Not Talking About History": Interrogating and Discussing Secondary Sources 179 Lance Weisend, Colleen Fitzpatrick, and Stephanie van Hover 15.  "These Are Human Beings We're Talking About": 9th Graders Think and Write About the Middle Passage 191 Jennifer Hauver, Victoria Lisle, and Ga-Min Lee About the Contributors 204 Index 206

    £33.11

  • Cooperative Games in Education  Building

    Teachers' College Press Cooperative Games in Education Building

    Book SynopsisOffers the first comprehensive guide to the world of cooperative play and games for pre-K-12 learning. The book includes a thorough pedagogical rationale and guidelines for practice, a survey of related research and scholarship, engaging anecdotes, illustrations, historical background, and an array of sample games to try.Table of Contents Contents Foreword ix Acknowledgments xiii Introduction 1 About Playing Together 1 Why This Book? 3 Contents of This Book 5 PART I. FOUNDATIONS OF COOPERATIVE GAMES 1. What Are Cooperative Play and Games? 8 Understanding Play 8 Defining Cooperative Games 10 A Brief History of Cooperative Games 10 Theories of Learning and Play Supporting Cooperative Games 12 Playful Learning 16 Meeting Current Challenges in Play with Cooperative Games 17 Chapter Summary 21 Play to Learn—Try This! 22 2. Learning to Cooperate 24 Understanding Cooperation 25 Forms of Cooperation 26 What Cooperation Is Not 27 Roots of Cooperation 28 Social Interdependence Theory: Cooperation versus Competition 30 Learning Cooperation in School 32 Teaching Cooperation Through Play and Games 33 What Research Says About Teaching Cooperation Through Games 35 Chapter Summary 36 Play to Learn—Try This! 37 3. Rethinking Competition 39 Defining Terms 40 Documented Downsides of Competition 42 Handling Competition With Care in the Classroom 48 Chapter Summary 49 Play to Learn—Try This! 50 PART II. SOME COOPERATIVE GAMES AND GUIDELINES FOR PRACTICE 4. A Gallery of Cooperative Games 52 Cooperative Games for Welcoming and Inclusion 53 Cooperative Games for Trust-Building and Empathy 55 Cooperative Games for Community-Building 56 Cooperative Games to Prevent Bullying 57 Cooperative Games for Young Children 59 Cooperative Games for Older Children, Tweens, and Teens 61 Cooperative Games to Teach Language Arts 62 Cooperative Games to Teach Math 63 Cooperative Games to Teach Science 64 Classic Cooperative Play Activities 66 Chapter Summary 66 Play to Learn—Try This! 67 5. A Guide to Facilitating Cooperative Games 68 The Five Steps of Facilitating Games 69 Designing Cooperative Games 75 Converting Competitive Games to Cooperative Games 78 Chapter Summary 79 Play to Learn—Try This! 79 PART III. APPLICATIONS OF COOPERATIVE GAMES 6. Cooperative Games to Support Cooperative Learning 82 Background on Cooperative Learning 83 Using Cooperative Games to Support Cooperative Learning 85 A Cooperative Games Training Program for Cooperative Learning 86 Chapter Summary 91 Play to Learn—Try This! 91 7. Cooperative Games and the "Soft Skills" 93 Teaching the Whole Student 93 Pedagogy of Cooperative Games for Social and Emotional Learning 94 Cooperative Games and Classroom Climate 98 Cooperative Games for Moral Education 100 Chapter Summary 101 Play to Learn—Try This! 102 8. Cooperative Games to Prevent Aggression 103 The Aggressive Student 103 Group Aggression: Fighting Together 105 Treating Group Aggression 110 Cooperative Games to Reduce Group Aggression at School 112 Chapter Summary 116 Play to Learn—Try This! 117 9. Cooperative Games in Early Childhood Education 119 Young Children and Play 120 Cooperative Play—The Capstone of Early Childhood Social Development 122 How Cooperative Play Promotes Social Development 123 Two Definitions of Cooperative Play 125 Summary of Important Differences Between Competitive and Cooperative Play 126 How to Use Cooperative Games in the Early Childhood Classroom 128 Chapter Summary 133 Play to Learn—Try This! 134 Epilogue: Putting It All Together: A Pedagogy of Cooperative Games 136 Elements of the Pedagogical Framework 136 Conclusion 139 Appendix A. Answers to Questions for Reflection 141 Appendix B. Resources for Further Exploration 145 References 147 Index 154 About the Author 161

    £24.69

  • Social Studies Literacy and Social Justice in  A

    John Wiley & Sons Social Studies Literacy and Social Justice in A

    Book SynopsisFor almost a decade, this groundbreaking resource has been one of the most highly used textbooks in justice-oriented social studies methods courses for grades 3-8. The author has thoroughly revised her bestseller to provide additional lessons that are more deeply situated within the current context of converging pandemics.

    £33.26

  • The Educators Guide to Designing Games and Crea

    John Wiley & Sons The Educators Guide to Designing Games and Crea

    Book SynopsisEvery educator’s imaginative instincts will be guided by this book’s practical design method, which harnesses the power of play for learning. Along with principles from game-based learning pedagogy, the book explores a framework of complex mechanic teaching templates, which help instructional activities cross the bridge into fully formed games.

    £35.66

  • The Educators Guide to Designing Games and Crea

    John Wiley & Sons The Educators Guide to Designing Games and Crea

    Book SynopsisEvery educator’s imaginative instincts will be guided by this book’s practical design method, which harnesses the power of play for learning. Along with principles from game-based learning pedagogy, the book explores a framework of complex mechanic teaching templates, which help instructional activities cross the bridge into fully formed games.

    £92.70

  • Becoming an Antiracist School Leader  Dare to Be

    Teachers' College Press Becoming an Antiracist School Leader Dare to Be

    Book SynopsisEradicating systemic racism in our schools requires a systemic response. This book describes an adaptive framework that includes ten tenets for developing structural and curricular antiracist leadership.Table of Contents Contents (Tentative) Series Foreword Introduction 1. My Racial Autobiography 2. Historical and Antiracist School Leadership Perspectives A Very Brief History of Antiracism in the United States A Very Brief History of AntiRacism in Public Education Perspectives: Racial Identity Identity Development and White People Identity Development for People of Color Identity Development for Multiracial People Theoretical Base: Critical Race Theory 3. Engaging in Antiracist Leadership Safe and Sacred Space Staff Collaboration 4. Critical Race Theory at Midwest High School Interest Convergence Whiteness as Property Critique of Liberalism Permanence of Racism 5. Racial Identity Development at Midwest High School White Racial Identity Identity Development for People of Color Conclusion 6. Tenets for Sustaining Antiracist School Leadership Systemic Implementation Support from the Top Common Language and Protocol Identity Development 7. The Story: A Gilded Age of Anti-Racism Prologue: Philadelphia Year One Year Two Year Three Epilogue: New Orleans Deepening Antiracist Leadership Shared Experiences Active Anti-Racist Leadership Active Anti-Racist Leadership Community/Family Engagement Conclusion Appendix References  549 Index  570 About the Author  571

    £33.96

  • Accelerating K8 Math Instruction  A Comprehensive

    Teachers' College Press Accelerating K8 Math Instruction A Comprehensive

    Book SynopsisShows K-8 teachers how to accelerate mathematics instruction so that all students learn and work on grade level, receive the right scaffolding when they need it, and feel a sense of achievement and success. Educators will in turn experience lower frustration and the joy of helping students thrive.Trade Review"This book would be an asset to classroom teachers, math specialists, and math intervention teachers in elementary and middle schools."—Teachers College RecordTable of Contents Contents (Tentative) Foreword Acknowledgment Introduction Acceleration Is Not Remediation Phrases We Need to Know 1. Research on Acceleration What Is Acceleration? What Is the Shift? Why Do We Accelerate? What Are the Benefits of Accelerating? How Do We Accelerate? Summary 2. Unpacking Prior Knowledge: Assessment as the Key to Acceleration The Importance of Prior Knowledge What Prior Knowledge Should Be Prioritized? Trickiness of Prior Knowledge The Role of Prior Knowledge in Accelerating Math Explicitly Tapping into Prior Knowledge Activating Prior Knowledge Posters Metacognition Graphic Organizers to Tap into Prior Knowledge Schema/Prior Knowledge Maps Summary 3. Acceleration and the Teaching of Math Vocabulary Directly Teaching the Vocabulary Practicing the Vocabulary Weaving the Vocabulary Throughout the Lesson Summary 4. Acceleration Lesson Plan Format Instruction Plan Assessment Plan Progress Monitoring Keeping Track Throughout the Lesson Planning Checklists Reflecting on the Acceleration Process Summary 5. Acceleration and Pedagogy Eight Recommendations for Mathematical Intervention Explicit and Systematic Instruction Math Intervention Lesson Distributed and Deliberate Practice Visualization Manipulatives Diagrams and Graphic Organizers Visuals for Word Problems Number Paths and Number Lines Graphic Organizers Visual Displays Choosing the Best Graphic Organizers Word Problems Fluency Math Think Alouds Emergent Bilinguals Building Mathematical Proficiency Math Practices and Processes Professional Development Summary 6. Acceleration: A Primary Classroom Example Jamal A Week of Scaffolding the Bridging 10 Strategy Tracking a 1-Week Acceleration Cycle A Week of Acceleration Evaluating the Acceleration Cycle Supporting the Acceleration Cycle Summary 7. Acceleration: An Upper Elementary Example Lucy Two Weeks of Scaffolding Division: Big Division Ideas Tracking a Two-Week Acceleration Cycle 8. Acceleration: A Middle School Example Mario Learning Trajectory of Division Two Weeks of Scaffolding Fraction Division: Big Fraction Ideas Tracking a Two-Week Acceleration Cycle Prior Knowledge: Trace of Dividing Fractions by Fractions Lesson 1: Dividing a Whole Number by a Fraction Lesson 2: Dividing a Whole Number by Any Fraction Dividing a Unit Fraction by a Whole Number Dividing a Fraction by a Fraction Progress Monitoring Daily Exit Slips Example of Mapping an Acceleration Cycle Reflecting on the Acceleration Cycle Supporting the Acceleration Cycle Summary 9. Connecting Progress Monitoring, Goal Setting, and Motivation Progress Monitoring for Acceleration Goal Setting Student Goal Setting High Quality Feedback and Motivation Motivation and Growth Mindset Summary Epilogue. Acceleration in Action: A Classroom Example Christine King References About the Author

    £27.54

  • Human Rights Education for the TwentyFirst

    University of Pennsylvania Press Human Rights Education for the TwentyFirst

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisHuman Rights Education for the Twenty-First Century is a comprehensive resource for training, education, and raising awareness in a wide variety of settings, both formal and informal. A diverse group of contributors—experienced activists, education experts, and representatives of several international governmental organizations—provides a rich potpourri of ideas and real-world approaches to initiating, planning, and implementing programs for teaching people about their human rights and fundamental freedoms. This volume has been developed for a global audience of educators, scholars in many disciplines, nongovernmental organizations, and foundation officers.Trade Review"The significance of this book cannot be overstated. . . . It is written for a global audience of educators at all levels, scholars in all disciplines, policy makers, and foundation officers." * Human Rights Quarterly *"This book, as a well-targeted, insightful, and accessible source, offers comprehensive conceptual and practical observations and recommendations that will serve the international human rights community for many years to come. Intergovernmental bodies, NGOs, activists, teachers, and others (including governments) will continue to use this book . . . well into the 21st century." * Netherlands Quarterly of Human Rights *

    1 in stock

    £42.50

  • Human Rights Education

    University of Pennsylvania Press Human Rights Education

    Book SynopsisOver the past seven decades, human rights education has blossomed into a global movement. A field of scholarship that utilizes teaching and learning processes, human rights education addresses basic rights and broadens the respect for the dignity and freedom of all peoples. Since the founding of the United Nations and the adoption of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights in 1948, human rights education has worked toward ensuring that schools and non-formal educational spaces become sites of promise and equity.Bringing together the voices of leaders and researchers deeply engaged in understanding the politics and possibilities of human rights education as a field of inquiry, Monisha Bajaj''s Human Rights Education shapes our understanding of the practices and processes of the discipline and demonstrates the ways in which it has evolved into a meaningful constellation of scholarship, policy, curricular reform, and pedagogy. Contributions by pioneers in the field, as wTrade Review"The collection's very existence (all 300-plus pages) signifies the remarkable growth, presence, and diversity of human rights education (HRE) . . . For anyone seeking inspiration and engagement, desiring systemic change and social justice, and hoping to learn more about the construction of work about HRE, through HRE, and for HRE, Human Rights Education is essential reading." * Human Rights Review *"Human Rights Education is a compelling and authoritative survey of the theoretical underpinnings, history, current state, and future of human rights education. This volume provides the field with an exhaustive text that addresses the concepts, complexities, and real world applications of human rights education…By providing a theoretical and experiential foundation for HRE, Human Rights Education proves not only that we can build and sustain rights-affirming knowledge bases and learning communities, we must." * International Journal of Human Rights Education *"Human Rights Education provides a glimpse into the emerging, complex, multifaceted, and, at times, overgeneralized field of human rights education. The book offers rich theoretical frameworks, global research, and lessons from transformative educational praxis to help readers define and understand human rights education as a distinct field…[This book is recommended] for anyone who works within education including teachers, administrators, social workers, school counselors, school board members, and policymakers [and] any citizen, activist, volunteer, parent, student, or government official interested in working for peace, justice, and a worldwide human rights culture." * Humanity & Society *"“[Bajaj’s] book provides essential material and resources for scholars, practitioners, activists, and policymakers who wish to engage with this dynamic field, especially in response to the rising tides of neo-fascism, economic exploitation, and the many forms of violence and discrimination in a changing and turbulent world… Human Rights Education provides an opportunity for researchers, practitioners, and administrators to reflect on their own practice and helps readers to reimagine a common future for cherishing diversity, praising human dignity and promoting human rights. This is essential if an adequate HRE is to be achieved." * Human Rights Education Review *"By assembling a collection of essays by leaders in the field of human rights education and drawing from a wide and distinguished set of disciplinary homes, Monisha Bajaj has done a great service to scholars, teachers, and students interested in pursuing this fast-emerging and critically important topic." * Jacqueline Bhabha, Harvard University *"Human Rights Education lives up to its promise. Monisha Bajaj has put together an impressive set of studies reviewing the whole rapidly expanding arena, from theory and research to fascinating accounts of practice." * John W. Meyer, Stanford University *

    £45.90

  • Making Sense of the College Curriculum  Faculty

    Rutgers University Press Making Sense of the College Curriculum Faculty

    3 in stock

    Book SynopsisOver 185 faculty members from eleven colleges and universities share personal, humorous, powerful, and poignant stories about their experiences in higher education. Collectively, these accounts help to answer the question of why developing a structured and coherent undergraduate education is such a vexing challenge for colleges and universities. Trade Review“Interviews of nearly 180 faculty at a diverse range of colleges and universities demonstrate an inspiring commitment to teaching and to doing whatever it takes to improve student learning. Yet this commitment has not translated into the kind of curricular reform our colleges and our society need if higher education is to be more accessible and effective. The authors, in candidly recounting faculty stories of frustrating failure as well as joyful success, provide important new insights into the many exasperating barriers to broader curricular change; impediments which can only be overcome by a new kind of partnership among faculty, institutional decision makers, and education leaders.” -- Richard Detweiler, Ph.D * President, Great Lakes Colleges Association *“There has been an on-going national conversation about what is taught in the higher education classroom and how much it matters. Making Sense of the College Curriculum responds strongly and directly to the conversation by offering a critical assessment of what some of the most committed teachers in higher education aspire to do in modernizing the curriculum. It places balanced emphasis on matters of racial and other social differences, the influence of social media, and the existence of instructional and other technology that have shaped the contemporary challenge of higher education teaching. It also delivers a clear message to faculty that thinking in much the same way over time about pedagogy is perilous because students are coming to the classroom each semester, academic year, and decade with different interests, capacities, and expectations about what higher educational learning is all about. Hence, for dedicated instructors sensitivity, self-awareness, and preparedness for adaption must be the constants.” -- Alford A. Young, Jr. * co-editor, Faculty Social Identity and the Challenges of Diversity: Reflections on Teaching in Highe *"‘Making Sense of the College Curriculum’: Authors discuss new book examining the faculty role -- and how professors view their responsibilities" by Scott Jaschik * Inside Higher Education *"Selected New Books in Higher Education," compiled by Ruth Hammond * Chronicle of Higher Education *"Not Just for Video Games: Virtual Reality Joins the Classroom" article in Teaching Newsletter * Chronicle of Higher Education *"Panicked universities in search of students are adding thousands of new majors" by Jon Marcus * Washington Post *"Colleges Nationwide Hope New Majors Will Attract Students," Robert Zemsky interview with Lauren Gilger * KJZZ *"Making Sense of The College Curriculum is a useful start about how to make a coherent college curriculum." * VoegelinView *Table of ContentsPreface: An Exercise in Sense Making Section I: Defining the Task Introduction: It's a Riddle After All Faculty Voice: Hard Conversations Section II: Passions 1 I Am a Bridge Faculty Voice: Taking Ownership 2 Why We Do What We Do Faculty Voice: Hidden among the Artifacts Faculty Voice: An Experiment in Experiential Learning Section III: Adaptations 3 Flying Solo Faculty Voice: Practice Makes Perfect Faculty Voice: Being a Doula 4 Change Is All About Us Faculty Voice: Nope, Too Busy 5 Losses and the Calculus of Subtraction Faculty Voice: Look, It’s a Course…It’s a Major…No, It’s SUPERMAJOR! Section IV: Frustrations 6 The Cost Conundrum Faculty Voice: Forty Years in the Desert Faculty Voice: Touching the Third Rail 7 Barriers Faculty Voice: Stepping into the Fray Section V: Conclusions 8 The Road Not Traveled References

    3 in stock

    £24.29

  • The Exhaustion of Difference  The Politics of

    Duke University Press The Exhaustion of Difference The Politics of

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisA sophisticated theoretical reconsideration of Latin American studies, critiquing past work and proposing new frameworks for the discipline.Trade Review“The Exhaustion of Difference ‘pushes Latin Americanist fulfilment against its limits.’ The limits radiate out into the networks of subalternities, locationisms, Area Studies/Cultural Studies, globalization and transculturation—and beyond. In these pages high theory is at home with Latin American intellectual history and deft textual analysis.”—Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, author of A Critique of Postcolonial Reason: Toward a History of the Vanishing Present“With extreme clarity of argument and intellectual sophistication, this book subjects the field’s epistemic diagram to a radical questioning that upsets the sociological and literary conventionalism of Latin American thinking on identity and difference, globalization and locality, and culture and politics. The rigor and positional force with which this book deploys its polemical apparatus will alter the academic pathways of reflection on Latin America.”—Nelly Richard, Editor, Revista de Crítica CulturalTable of ContentsAcknowledgments Introduction: Conditions of Latin Americanist Critique 1. Global Fragments 2. Negative Globality and Critical Regionalism 3. Theoretical Fictions and Fatal Conceits 4. Restitution and Appropriation 5. The National Popular in Antonio Candido and Jorge Luis Borges 6. The End of Magical Realism: Jose Maria Arguedas’s Passionate Signifier 7. The Aura of Testimonio 8. The Order of Order: On the Reluctant Culturalism of Anti-Subalternist Critiques 9. Hybridity and Double Consciousness Notes Works Cited Index

    1 in stock

    £27.90

  • The Exhaustion of Difference

    Duke University Press The Exhaustion of Difference

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisThe conditions for thinking about Latin America as a regional unit in transnational academic discourse have shifted over the past decades. In The Exhaustion of Difference Alberto Moreiras ponders the ramifications of this shift and draws on deconstruction, Marxian theory, philosophy, political economy, subaltern studies, literary criticism, and postcolonial studies to interrogate the minimal conditions for an effective critique of knowledge given the recent transformations of the contemporary world.What, asks Moreiras, is the function of critical reason in the present moment? What is regionalistic knowledge in the face of globalization? Can regionalistic knowledge be an effective tool for a critique of contemporary reason? What is the specificity of Latin Americanist reflection and how is it situated to deal with these questions? Through examinations of critical regionalism, restitutional excess, the historical genealogy of Latin American subalternism, testimonioTrade Review“The Exhaustion of Difference ‘pushes Latin Americanist fulfilment against its limits.’ The limits radiate out into the networks of subalternities, locationisms, Area Studies/Cultural Studies, globalization and transculturation—and beyond. In these pages high theory is at home with Latin American intellectual history and deft textual analysis.”—Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, author of A Critique of Postcolonial Reason: Toward a History of the Vanishing Present“With extreme clarity of argument and intellectual sophistication, this book subjects the field’s epistemic diagram to a radical questioning that upsets the sociological and literary conventionalism of Latin American thinking on identity and difference, globalization and locality, and culture and politics. The rigor and positional force with which this book deploys its polemical apparatus will alter the academic pathways of reflection on Latin America.”—Nelly Richard, Editor, Revista de Crítica CulturalTable of ContentsAcknowledgments Introduction: Conditions of Latin Americanist Critique 1. Global Fragments 2. Negative Globality and Critical Regionalism 3. Theoretical Fictions and Fatal Conceits 4. Restitution and Appropriation 5. The National Popular in Antonio Candido and Jorge Luis Borges 6. The End of Magical Realism: Jose Maria Arguedas’s Passionate Signifier 7. The Aura of Testimonio 8. The Order of Order: On the Reluctant Culturalism of Anti-Subalternist Critiques 9. Hybridity and Double Consciousness Notes Works Cited Index

    1 in stock

    £112.20

  • Witnessing Girlhood  Toward an Intersectional

    Fordham University Press Witnessing Girlhood Toward an Intersectional

    Book SynopsisTable of ContentsIntroduction: Witnessing Girlhood | 1 1. Girls in Crisis: Feminist Resistance in Life Writing by Women of Color | 13 2. Gender Pessimism and Survivor Storytelling in the Memoir Boom: Girl, Interrupted, Autobiography of a Face, and Nanette | 38 3. Visualizing Sexual Violence and Feminist Child Witness: A Child’s Life and Other Stories and Becoming Unbecoming | 63 4. Teaching Dissent through Picture Books: Girlhood Activism and Graphic Life Writing for the Child | 86 Epilogue. Twenty-First-Century Formations: Child Witness, Trans Life Writing, and Futurity | 101 Acknowledgments | 113 Notes | 115 Index | 141

    £19.79

  • Witnessing Girlhood

    Fordham University Press Witnessing Girlhood

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisTable of ContentsIntroduction: Witnessing Girlhood | 1 1. Girls in Crisis: Feminist Resistance in Life Writing by Women of Color | 13 2. Gender Pessimism and Survivor Storytelling in the Memoir Boom: Girl, Interrupted, Autobiography of a Face, and Nanette | 38 3. Visualizing Sexual Violence and Feminist Child Witness: A Child’s Life and Other Stories and Becoming Unbecoming | 63 4. Teaching Dissent through Picture Books: Girlhood Activism and Graphic Life Writing for the Child | 86 Epilogue. Twenty-First-Century Formations: Child Witness, Trans Life Writing, and Futurity | 101 Acknowledgments | 113 Notes | 115 Index | 141

    1 in stock

    £78.30

  • Places of Curriculum Making Narrative Inquiries

    Emerald Publishing Limited Places of Curriculum Making Narrative Inquiries

    Book SynopsisFocusing on school as place where curriculum is made to realizing the ways children and families are engaged as curriculum makers in homes, in communities, and in the spaces in-between, outside of school, this book investigates the tensions experienced by teachers, children and families as they make curriculum attentive to lives.Table of ContentsChapter 1. Interrupting Understandings of Curriculum Making Chapter 2. Narrative Inquiry As Relational Multiperspectival Inquiry Chapter 3. Loyla's Familial Curriculum Making in the Home and Community Chapter 4. Ji-Sook's and Brent's Stories to Live By Chapter 5. The School Curriculum Making of Ji-Sook and Brent Chapter 6. The Familial Curriculum Making of Ji-Sook, Brent, and Their Families Chapter 7. Living in Two Worlds of Curriculum Making: Children as World Travellers Chapter 8. Conceptualizing Curriculum Making as Interwoven With Identity Making and Assessment Making Chapter 9. Worlds and, of Necessity, World Travel: Conversations With Curriculum Theorists, Parents, Others, and Teacher Educators

    £90.99

  • HandsOn Algebra

    John Wiley & Sons Inc HandsOn Algebra

    Book SynopsisLay a solid foundation of algebra proficiency with over 155 hands-on games and activities. To complement the natural process of learning, each activity builds on the previous one-- from concrete to pictorial to abstract. Dr. Thompson''s unique three-step approach encourages students to first recognize patterns; then use diagrams, tables, and graphs to illustrate algebraic concepts; and finally, apply what they''ve learned through cooperative games, puzzles, problems, and activities using a graphic calculator and computer. You''ll find each activity has complete teacher directions, lists of materials needed, and helpful examples for discussion, homework, and quizzes. Most activities include time-saving reproducible worksheets for use with individual students, small groups, or the entire class. This ready-to-use resource contains materials sufficient for a two-semester course in Algebra I and can be adapted for advanced students as well as students with dyslexia.Table of ContentsAbout This Book. Real Numbers, Their Operations, and Their Properties. Linear Forms. Linear Applications and Graphing. Quadratic Concepts. Special Applications. Appendix: Tile Patterns.

    £22.49

  • General Education Essentials

    John Wiley & Sons Inc General Education Essentials

    Book SynopsisOffers an overview of and a rationale for the shift in general education curricular design, a sense of how this shift can affect a faculty member's teaching, and an understanding of how all of this might impact course and student assessment.Table of ContentsForeword xi About the Author xv Acknowledgments xvii Introduction 1 PART ONE: THE BIG PICTURE 9 1 Structuring General Education 11 2 Some Examples of Integrative Curricular Models 25 PART TWO: GENERAL EDUCATION AT THE COURSE LEVEL 43 3 Designing Effective General Education Courses 45 4 How the Purposes of General Education Can Reshape a Course: Case Studies 54 PART THREE: GENERAL EDUCATION AT THE ASSIGNMENT AND ASSESSMENT LEVEL 73 5 Designing Appropriate Assignments for General Education 75 6 The Chapter You May Want to Skip: Institutional Assessment and General Education 94 Conclusion 107 Appendix A: Syllabus for Artistic and Literary Responses to Science and Technology 109 Appendix B: Syllabus for The Way Things Work: Sky Diving and Deep Sea Diving 117 Appendix C: Syllabus for Traveling Without Leaving: Global Sociology 125 Appendix D: Syllabus for Elite Deviance: Crime in the Suites 137 Appendix E: Syllabus for Does Gun Control Save Lives? 145 Appendix F: Syllabus for Statistics and Botany 151 References 157 Index 161

    £29.44

  • Learning to Be Literate

    WW Norton & Co Learning to Be Literate

    Book SynopsisThere is not one right way to teach a child to read

    £28.49

  • Common Core

    Johns Hopkins University Press Common Core

    20 in stock

    Book SynopsisHow the Common Core standardizes our kids' educationand how it threatens our democracy. The Common Core State Standards Initiative is one of the most controversial pieces of education policy to emerge in decades. Detailing what and when K12 students should be taught, it has led to expensive reforms and displaced other valuable ways to educate children. In this nuanced and provocative book, Nicholas Tampio argues that, though national standards can raise the education bar for some students, the democratic costs outweigh the benefits. To make his case, Tampio describes the history, philosophy, content, and controversy surrounding the Common Core standards for English language arts and math. He also explains and critiques the Next Generation Science Standards, the Advanced Placement US History curriculum framework, and the National Sexuality Education Standards. Though each set of standards has admirable elements, Tampio asserts that democracies should disperse education authority ratTrade ReviewIn Common Core: National Education Standards and the Threat to Democracy, Nicholas Tampio offers a concise and readable anatomy of the Common Core movement as well as a case against national standards generally.—Wall Street JournalThe book is brief, pithy, to-the-point and well-focused, making it a great gift for your civilian friend who wants a quick, accessible explanation of what all the fuss is about.—CurmudgucationCommon Core provides a useful reminder of how educators—together with parents, and civil society—should be engaged in a larger political process of how schools, curricula, and national standards are organized.—Emmerich Davies, Harvard University, Perspectives on PoliticsTable of ContentsAbout the AuthorAcknowledgmentsIntroduction1. Arguments for National Education Standards2. Arguments against National Education Standards3. English Standards, Close Reading, and Testing4. Math Standards, Understanding, and College and Career Readiness5. Science Standards, Scientific Unity, and the Problem of Sustainability6. History Standards, American Identity, and the Politics of Storytelling7. Sexuality Standards, Gender Identity, and Religious FreedomConclusionEpilogueNotesReferencesIndex

    20 in stock

    £21.38

© 2026 Book Curl

    • American Express
    • Apple Pay
    • Diners Club
    • Discover
    • Google Pay
    • Maestro
    • Mastercard
    • PayPal
    • Shop Pay
    • Union Pay
    • Visa

    Login

    Forgot your password?

    Don't have an account yet?
    Create account