Intern Teachers Using Currere"
Peter Lang Publishing Inc (Verlag)
978-1-4331-7138-3 (ISBN)
Intern Teachers Using Currere: Discovering Education as a River is about a new way of grounding students in teacher preparation programs that allows them to access their previous experiences and concepts of education as the basis for developing their individual understandings of curriculum in the fullness of its meaning. Currere is shown as a remarkable process that can have a tremendously positive influence on a teacher’s developing identity, her understanding of lived curriculum, and her emerging recognition of pedagogy.
The metaphor of a river is used to open up the phenomenon of using Currere to understand curriculum through various sources that reveal relationships with language, dwelling, identity, and hermeneutic phenomenology. The initial themes that arise include moments, in-between spaces, abundance, resilience, and the flow of lived experience. Further conversation and interpretation reveal deeper pedagogical themes, including navigating unexpected experiences; the difficulties of finding authenticity in a mentor’s classroom; the constant state of being watched, observed, and evaluated; exploring the teacher-self; and discovering the curriculum and pedagogy of lived experience.
Based on these emergent themes, this book explores ways in which the lived experience of using Currere to understand curriculum has pedagogical implications for teacher practice and teacher preparation. It suggests that opportunities for intern teachers to use the Currere process can help them discover for themselves what it is to be a teacher; develop orientations of stewardship toward professional practice; deepen their understandings of curriculum in its abundance; and create a lived curriculum of pedagogical care in their classrooms for the children whom they have committed to serve.
Leslie L. Palmer’s experience includes teaching elementary, middle, and high school, as well as eight years as Director of Student Teaching for the St. Mary’s College Master of Arts in Teaching program. She holds a PhD from the University of Maryland, College Park, in teaching and learning, policy, and leadership.
Acknowledgments – Introduction – Catching the Currents of Currere to Discover Lived Curriculum – Currere: Running the Course of Lived Curriculum – Philosophical Currents That Guide the Phenomenological Exploration of Curriculum as Currere – Currere as Wellspring Toward Understanding Curriculum – Living Currere: Envisioning the Future, Returning to the Source, and Embracing the Present – Index.
“This book offers educators a viable and exciting way to break the stranglehold testing has on public education. By focusing on the lived experience of both educator and student, Leslie L. Palmer offers us a way to more fully understand the power, joy, and complexity of what it means to be a teacher by addressing the pressing need to once again humanize education. This work invites us to cease defining children by test scores and shift our focus toward once again teaching the whole child with intention and with the vital awareness of the ‘lived curriculum’ that children experience in their classrooms each and every day.”
—Michael S. Glaser, Professor Emeritus, St. Mary’s College of Maryland; Poet Laureate of Maryland 2004–2009; Board Member, Maryland Humanities, 2011–2018
Erscheinungsdatum | 07.10.2019 |
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Reihe/Serie | Complicated Conversation ; 55 |
Verlagsort | New York |
Sprache | englisch |
Maße | 150 x 225 mm |
Gewicht | 390 g |
Themenwelt | Sozialwissenschaften ► Pädagogik ► Berufspädagogik |
Sozialwissenschaften ► Soziologie ► Empirische Sozialforschung | |
ISBN-10 | 1-4331-7138-4 / 1433171384 |
ISBN-13 | 978-1-4331-7138-3 / 9781433171383 |
Zustand | Neuware |
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