Search results for ""Author William F. Pinar""
Narcea, S.A. de Ediciones La teoría del currículo
William Pinar es sin duda el teórico contemporáneo más importante del curriculum. Desde la década de los 70, Pinar ha encabezado los movimientos teóricos más importantes: la reconceptualizacion, la post-reconceptualización y la internalización del curriculum. Ha publicado más de 40 libros, docenas de artículos y formado varias asociaciones profesionales y un par de revistas dedicadas al cultivo de la disciplina.Pinar aborda el curriculum de manera histórica, fenomenológica, autobiográfica y posmoderna. Propone recuperar la reconstrucción subjetiva del individuo a través de currere autoformación y bildung. Para este autor solo a través de la reconstrucción subjetiva del individuo podrá darse el cambio o reconstrucción social. El lector también podrá apreciar la originalidad de su teoría de género, raza y el ?curriculum como lugar?, así como sus argumentos en contra de las reformas educativas a las que el autor denomina ?deformas?. Pinar critica el desarrollo del curriculum, con base
£23.08
Taylor & Francis Ltd The Worldliness of a Cosmopolitan Education: Passionate Lives in Public Service
Pinar positions himself against three pressing problems of the profession: the crime of collectivism that identity politics commits, the devaluation of academic knowledge by the programmatic preoccupations of teacher education, and the effacement of educational experience by standardized testing. A cosmopolitan curriculum, Pinar argues, juxtaposes the abstract and the concrete, the collective and the individual: history and biography, politics and art, public service and private passion. Such a curriculum provides passages between the subjective and the social, and in so doing, engenders that worldliness a cosmopolitan education invites. Such worldliness is vividly discernible in the lives of three heroic individuals: Jane Addams (1860-1935), Laura Bragg (1881-1978), and Pier Paolo Pasolini (1922-1975). What these disparate individuals demonstrate is the centrality of subjectivity in the cultivation of cosmopolitanism. Subjectivity takes form in the world, and the world is itself reconstructed by subjectivity’s engagement with it.In this intriguing, thought-provoking, and nuanced work, Pinar outlines a cosmopolitan curriculum focused on passionate lives in public service, providing one set of answers to how the field accepts and attends to the inextricably interwoven relations among intellectual rigor, scholarly erudition, and intense but variegated engagement with the world.
£140.00
Peter Lang Publishing Inc The Synoptic Text Today and Other Essays: Curriculum Development After the Reconceptualization
£25.10