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Showing 1 to 15 of 24 results Save | Export
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Staley, Sara – Curriculum Inquiry, 2023
The scholarly conversation on preparing teachers to organize safer, more humanizing learning environments for lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, and questioning (LGBTQ+) youth generally does not intersect with conversations unfolding in the broader teacher education literature, specifically around what "practice" means in…
Descriptors: LGBTQ People, Kindergarten, Inclusion, Curriculum
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Karmiris, Maria – Curriculum Inquiry, 2022
The purpose of this article is to engage crip theory in a critical analysis of the calls within elementary education for a return to normalcy. I seek to question the ways COVID-19 has reinforced orientations towards normalcy by asking where normalcy went and how the calls for its return reveal the fundamental limits of inclusion within schools.…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Elementary Education, Inclusion
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Wargo, Jon M.; Morales, Melita; Corbitt, Alex – Curriculum Inquiry, 2022
Building on sociocultural theories of literacy learning, in this article, we think at the intersection of reader response theory and multimodal literacies to examine how 13 preservice teachers in the course Teaching Social Sciences Through the Arts remediated responses to Francisco Jiménez's "The Circuit: Stories From the Life of a Migrant…
Descriptors: Preservice Teachers, Elementary School Teachers, Computer Peripherals, Printing
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Rahman, Samiha – Curriculum Inquiry, 2021
Black Muslim youth confront antiblackness and Islamophobia in US schools and society, yet few studies examine how this population navigates these intersecting oppressions. In addition, there has been a dearth of scholarly literature that explores the educational spaces in which Black Muslim youth are nurtured and affirmed. This article addresses…
Descriptors: African Americans, Muslims, Religious Schools, Islamic Culture
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Rodríguez, Noreen Naseem – Curriculum Inquiry, 2020
Difficult histories that may contradict national values are rarely taught in elementary schools. This comparative study of two elementary educators examines their pedagogical approaches to the teaching of Japanese American incarceration as difficult history. Framed by Asian American critical race theory, the teachers' practices revealed challenges…
Descriptors: War, Japanese Americans, United States History, Elementary School Students
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Vickery, Amanda E.; Salinas, Cinthia S. – Curriculum Inquiry, 2019
This qualitative case study investigates how two preservice elementary teachers crafted narratives of Black women in the Civil Rights Movement using an intersectional lens. Using Black feminism and Black critical patriotism as theoretical frameworks, the authors examine the process in which preservice teachers attempted to construct historical…
Descriptors: Civil Rights, African Americans, Females, Feminism
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Eppley, Karen – Curriculum Inquiry, 2019
Close reading has been a key shift in classroom instruction under the Common Core State Standards (CCSS). The CCSS positions evidence extraction as the purpose for reading in school and is clear that close reading is the means by which this should occur. Using alternate readings of the picture book, "Letting Swift River Go", I'll argue…
Descriptors: Critical Reading, Common Core State Standards, Picture Books, Reading Instruction
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Brownell, Cassie J. – Curriculum Inquiry, 2019
Classrooms are host to complex sonic ecologies informed by ritualized patterns and routines, but there remains a dearth of scholarship studying everyday sounds of schooling. Such research is important because it can amplify in new ways how children's identities are constructed and thickened over time. This interpretive case study takes up the…
Descriptors: Acoustics, Elementary Education, Language Arts, Identification (Psychology)
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Thomas, Rhianna – Curriculum Inquiry, 2019
In my second year teaching at the elementary level, two biracial first graders told a Black child that she could not play because her skin was too dark. I found myself, a white female teacher, using the language of the bullying prevention programme to ignore the racialized nature of the incident and ultimately enact a hidden curriculum of white…
Descriptors: Bullying, Prevention, Racial Bias, Social Bias
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Knight, Hunter – Curriculum Inquiry, 2019
In this essay, I analyse Egerton Ryerson's proposed curriculum for the first state-led mass public educational system in Ontario. Egerton Ryerson, Chief Superintendent of Schools in Upper Canada during the wide-scale proliferation of state schooling across Turtle Island, produced proposals for "universal" common schools, as well as…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Foundations of Education, Public Schools, Educational History
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Theodorou, Eleni; Philippou, Stavroula; Kontovourki, Stavroula – Curriculum Inquiry, 2017
Against the background of a curriculum change in the Republic of Cyprus, this study focuses on teachers who volunteered to work along with academics and ministry officials in subject-area curriculum review committees to develop official curriculum texts. Teachers' participation in these committees was construed in official rhetoric as a means to…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Expertise, Elementary School Teachers, Curriculum Development
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Maclear, Kyo – Curriculum Inquiry, 2016
Taking inspiration from Paulo Freire's "Pedagogy of the Oppressed," I propose to work through some of the features of "false generosity" that arise in education and specifically in moments of acute crisis. This inquiry, which begins with (and was sparked by) events following the 2011 Tohoku earthquake and tsunami, continues…
Descriptors: Role of Education, Teaching (Occupation), Educational Theories, Educational Benefits
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Lynch, Julianne; Herbert, Sandra – Curriculum Inquiry, 2015
School-wide curriculum initiatives are complex fields of activity, held together by a cast of heterogeneous actors who put diverse discourses to work in their everyday efforts to shape their work. This paper draws upon qualitative data collected across an 18-month period in a regional Australian primary school that, since the beginning of 2012,…
Descriptors: Curriculum, Holistic Approach, Science Curriculum, Animals
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Bickmore, Kathy – Curriculum Inquiry, 2014
Constructively critical and inclusive dialogue about conflictual issues is one necessary ingredient of both democratic citizenship and peacebuilding learning. However, in North American classrooms populated by heterogeneous and non-affluent students, pedagogies involving discussion of conflicts are rarely fully implemented, sustained, or inclusive…
Descriptors: Peace, Teaching Methods, Foreign Countries, Public Schools
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Roth, Wolff-Michael – Curriculum Inquiry, 2013
In this article, I (1) argue for approaching processes, events-in-the-making, by means of process categories--to learn, to teach--not by means of categories that denote differences in state and (2) exemplify doing and writing research consistent with process philosophy. To understand process we must not think, research, and write them in terms of…
Descriptors: Curriculum, Educational Theories, Geometry, Elementary School Mathematics
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