Title: 85013 Educational Foundations2
185013Educational Foundations2
- Othering Education
- New Stories about Difference
285013 EDUCATIONAL FOUNDATIONS 2TAKE-HOME
EXAMINATION
Full details on the website http//www.usq.edu.
au/ancil/foe/85013 WHEN Can be collected from
Wednesday afternoon 19th September
onwards. WHERE In Toowoomba, go to Faculty of
Education Office (G232) situated off the Foyer on
the Ground Floor of G Block (contact Margaret
Toleman). In Wide Bay, exam can be collected from
Emily Gatt
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3- PLEASE NOTE Another person can pick it up BUT
they must have written authorization from you - OR you can make arrangements for it to be posted
BUT only with permission. You need a stamped
addressed envelope.Â
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4Education and the Other
- Othering process
- Centre-Margin
- Invisible - Visible
- Dominant-Subordinate
- Normal - Deviant
- What constitutes dominant, normal views of
education?
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5Axes of Difference
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6Education as a function of society
- John Dewey
- Education for Democracy
- Role of Reflection Critique
- Progressivism
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7Transformative teaching
Transformation Change Education as implicitly
individually transformative Education as
implicitly socially conservative Teaching as
personally and socially transformative Ethics
and philosophy
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8Social Reconstructionism
- Basic Premise
- Citizenship is best promoted through critical
engagement with the social world, where knowledge
is derived from what citizens need to know to
achieve social vision - Method
- Reflective Inquiry and Action identify problems,
locate social origins of present arrangements,
generate solutions, act upon commitment
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9A Partial Timeline
George Counts
1983 - date Teachers as Transformative
Intellectuals
1932 Dare the Schools Build a New Social Order ?
Henry Giroux
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10George Counts
- Bolshevik Revolution
- Depression 1930s
- Indoctrination
- Teacher Social Vision
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11Theodore Brameld
- 1960s
- Cold War
- Technology - atomic / nuclear armaments
- Education as force for drawing back from brink of
extinction
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12Henry Giroux
- Teachers as Transformative Intellectuals
- Civic courage
- Education as a political endeavour
- Moral / ethical basis to teacher work
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13Paulo Freire
- Pedagogy of the oppressed
- Conscientisation
- Banking model of education
- Critical literacy
- Read the world to change the world
- 3rd World pedagogies
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14Critical pedagogy
Hebrew tikkun to heal, repair, and transform
the world Sense of social betterment Sides with
oppressed, disadvantaged, marginalised Critical
theory
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15 Foundational principles Politics
disclose, challenge role schools play in
political, cultural life schools seen as
instructional and cultural sites ideological and
social forms collide in struggle for dominance
knowledge/power connection schools analysed in
two ways as sorting mechanisms (race, class,
gender criteria) AND as agencies
for self and social empowerment
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16Culture
schooling represents introduction to, preparation
for, legitimation of particular forms of social
life favours/privileges specific vision of past,
present and future schooling reproduces
inequality, racism, sexism AND fragments
democratic social relations (emphasis on
competitiveness and cultural ethnocentrism)
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17Economics
logic of marketplace directs schooling
neo-conservative agenda of production of
compliant, productive and patriotic workers the
aim management-type pedagogies and accountability
schemes leads to deskilling of teachers clerks
of the empire c.p. sees schooling for self and
social empowerment as ethically prior to
mastery of technical skills
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18Essential concepts
hidden curriculum voice ideology hegemony cult
ural capital critique hope
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19Important Critical Educators
Maxine Greene
Henry Giroux
Jonathan Kozol
Peter McLaren
Michael Apple
Ira Shor
John Dewey
Jenny Gore
George Counts
Paulo Friere
bell hooks
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20Ira Shor
Critical Teaching and Everyday Life (1987)
378.125 Sho Empowering Education (1992) 370.973
Sho Friere for the Classroom (1987) 371.102
Fre/Fre A Pedagogy for Liberation (1987) 370.973
Sho Re-experience the ordinary
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21Peter McLaren
If teachers unwittingly participate in what
critical educational theorists call social
reproduction, what would could you as a
teacher do to overcome the the worst dimensions
of this process ? If teaching and learning are
forms of cultural politics, what are the ways in
which we unconsciously silence or exclude
different student voices in our classrooms, such
as the voices of minority and economically
disadvantaged students?
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