Rethinking High-Leverage Practices in Justice-Oriented Ways
Justice-oriented teaching must address how classroom-based disciplinary learning is shaped by interactions among local practice and systems of privilege and oppression. Our work advances current scholarship on high-leverage practices [HLPs] by emphasizing the need for teaching practices that restruc...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of teacher education 2020-09, Vol.71 (4), p.477-494 |
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container_title | Journal of teacher education |
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creator | Calabrese Barton, Angela Tan, Edna Birmingham, Daniel J. |
description | Justice-oriented teaching must address how classroom-based disciplinary learning is shaped by interactions among local practice and systems of privilege and oppression. Our work advances current scholarship on high-leverage practices [HLPs] by emphasizing the need for teaching practices that restructure power relations in classrooms and their intersections with historicized injustice in local practice as a part of disciplinary learning. Drawing upon a critical justice stance, and long-term collaborative work with middle school teachers and youth, we report on empirically driven insights into patterns-in-practice in teaching which yield insight into both what justice-oriented high-leverage practices may be, and the cross-cutting ideals which undergird them. We discuss the patterns-in-practice and their implications for teaching and learning across subject areas: HLPs that work toward equitable and consequential ends need to be understood in terms of the practice itself and its individual and collective impact on classroom life. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1177/0022487119900209 |
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subjects | Classroom Environment Cooperation Education reform Educational Change Educational Practices Educational reform Health Promotion Immigrants Learner Engagement Leverage Middle School Students Middle School Teachers Pedagogy Peer Relationship Power Structure Science Instruction Smoking Social Change Social Justice Sustainability Teacher education Teachers Teaching Teaching Methods |
title | Rethinking High-Leverage Practices in Justice-Oriented Ways |
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