<p>âIf I believe that democracy is for everyone, that students should learn to think and act in the community, and that it is not enough just to learn one story from history, then this book is a wonderful place to begin conversations about building that world.â</p>
<p>â<strong><em>Teachers College Record</em></strong></p>
Theory holds the capacity to help educators see the world differently, challenge problematic assumptions and practices that cultivate harm, and illuminate pathways toward access, equity, justice, joy, and love. While it is easy to underestimate the role of theory in such pursuits throughout social studies education, this book shows that theory is always-already present in all productions of teaching and learning. In this collection, well-established scholars highlight a broad range of theories that are currently used to alter the landscape of social studies instruction. Important to these efforts is the position that theory does not exist in a vacuum, but rather is the reflection of a certain set of concepts and the relationship that one holds to those ideas. Taking these further, each chapter author employs storytelling as a means to share their personal history and unpack how they came to understand their selected theoretical topic. They address a breadth of concepts, such as Black feminism, psychoanalysis, racial capitalism, settler colonialism, sustainability, and technoskepticism.
Book Features:
The only resource of its kind that pairs storying with a far-reaching range of theories actively used by scholars in the field of social studies education and research.Brief chapters, arranged alphabetically by concept, provide structure while also staying true to the bookâs framing of theory as being curious, fragmented, nomadic, and discursive.Embedded connections within each chapter will help readers understand the relational and entangled nature of theory.
Les mer
While it is easy to underestimate the role of theory throughout social studies education, this book shows that theory is always-already present in all productions of teaching and learning. In this collection, scholars highlight a broad range of theories that are currently being used to alter the landscape of social studies instruction.
Les mer
Contents
Acknowledgments âxi
Foreword: Looking Out for Theoretical Plausibilities Vonzell Agosto âxiii
Introduction: Always-Already on the Lookout Searching for, Enacting, and Storying Theory in Social Studies Education Bretton A. Varga and Erin C. Adams â1
1. âAcademicâs Disease â10
Tommy Ender
2. âAffect as Potential: Interrupting Social Studies Education â18
Peter M. Nelson
3. âBeyond the Majority Rules: Anarchism in Social Studies Education â25
John Lupinacci and Brandon Edwards-Schuth
4. âPhobogenic Hypervisibility as the Invisibility of Black Men and Boys â32
Daniel Josiah Thomas III
5. âTo Live Differently: Haecceity and Becoming as Concepts to (Un)do Social Studies Education â39
Rebecca C. Christ
6. ââDonât Just Thank Black Women. Follow Us.â: Black Feminist Civic Activism â45
Amanda E. Vickery
7. ââNobodyâs Free Until Everybodyâs Freeâ: Black Feminismâs Implications for Social Studies Education Research â53
Kristen E. Duncan
8. âEmphasis on Radical: Centering Black Feminist Radical Politics â59
Tiffany Mitchell Patterson
9. âMoving Toward Interdependent Relations and Anti-Colonial Understandings With Theories of Post-Critical Global Citizenship â65
Timothy Patterson and Jenni Conrad
10. âCritical Refugee Studies Encounter Social Studies â73
Sohyun An
11. âDecolonial Global Citizenship Education â79
Theresa Alviar-Martin and Mark Baildon
12. ââNo Humans Involvedâ Revisited: What Social Studies Might Learn From Sylvia Wynterâs Examinations of Columbus and the Rodney King Trial â86
Esther June Kim
13. âSchools as Apparatuses of Security: Governmentality and True Power â93
Wayne Journell
14. ââThey Got Us Warring for Our Freedomâ: Toward a TrapCrit Perspective for Social Studies Education â99
Kelly R. Allen
15. âHow Hyperreality Morphs Social Studies Inquiries â106
Cathryn van Kessel
16. âIntergenerational Knowledge: Embodied Archives and Silenced Narratives in Education â114
Muna Saleh
17. âReflecting on the Mimetic: (Material) Double-Dealings and Duplicities Within Social Studies Education â121
Erin C. Adams and Bretton A. Varga
18. âMobilities Theory and Social Studies Education â129
Stacey L. Kerr
19. âIâm With Them: Enacting a Pedagogy of Solidarity â135
Ryan Oto
20. âChoosing to Teach in Pointy Heels (and Other Postfeminist Dilemmas) â142
Mardi Schmeichel
21. âPsychoanalysis and Social Studies Education â148
H. James Garrett
22. âQueer Geography â155
Sandra J. Schmidt
23. âIntentionally Hidden From the Masses: (Racial) Capitalismâs Omission in the Social Studies â161
Jillian Ford
24. âDefiant, Playful, and Inventive: Rasquache Social Studies Theorizing â168
Tim Monreal
25 âWitnessing Scar(ring)s: Settler Colonial Theory for Social Studies Education Research â178
Sarah B. Shear
26. âSociogenesis and Social Studies Education â186
Danielle I. Charlemagne
27. ââSocialâ Sustainability and Its Implications on Teaching and Learning in Social Studies â194
Yun-Wen Chan
28. âTechnoskepticism in Social Studies Education â202
Daniel G. Krutka, Marie K. Heath, and Jacob Pleasants
29. âOn the Insufficiency of Counterstories: Empathic Fallacy and (Un)Expected Readers â209
Noreen Naseem RodrĂguez
Afterword: Imagining Possible Futures in Social Studies Education and Beyond â216
E. Wayne Ross
Endnotes â223
Index â227
About the Editors and Contributors â238
Les mer
âThe authors ask readers to maintain a sense of urgency to study social life, critique power relations, and be on the lookout for theoretical im/plausibilities.â
âFrom the Foreword by Vonzell Agosto, professor, educational leadership and policy studies, University of South Florida
Les mer
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780807786406
Publisert
2024-10-25
Utgiver
Vendor
Teachers' College Press
Høyde
229 mm
Bredde
156 mm
Dybde
13 mm
AldersnivĂĽ
P, 06
SprĂĽk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
256
Series edited by
Foreword by
Afterword by
Om bidragsyterne
Bretton A. Varga is an assistant professor of historyâsocial science at California State University, Chico and coeditor of Toward a Stranger and More Posthuman Social Studies. Erin C. Adams is an associate professor of elementary social studies at Kennesaw State University.