Mapping the Field : 75 Years of Educational Review, Volume II

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Mapping the Field : 75 Years of Educational Review, Volume II

  • 言語:ENG
  • ISBN:9781032517384
  • eISBN:9781000983821

ファイル: /

Description

From its origins in the University of Birmingham’s then Institute of Education in 1948, Educational Review has emerged as a leading international journal for generic educational research. Seventy-five years on, Mapping the Field presents a detailed account of education theory and research, policy, and practice through the lens of key articles published in the journal over this timespan.

Volume II opens with Part I, a collection of articles examining teachers’ job (dis/) satisfaction and stress, and the gendered composition of the teaching workforce. Articles in Part II trace a shift in academic focus from schools seen as families/communities, to the parent-school relationship. The concepts of inclusion and equality—and strategies for their fulfilment in education—are interrogated in Part III. The volume concludes with Part IV, in which diverse identities in the education field are represented.

Curated and introduced by the editors, the articles included in both volumes of Mapping the Field represent a careful selection from the work of scholars whose ideas have been, and continue to be, influential in the field of education. Overall, this major text covers a wide range of topics and offers original insights into educational policy, provision, processes, and practice from around the world.

Table of Contents

Part I: Teachers and their work

Marion Bowl and Jane Martin

1. Men teachers and the “feminised” primary school: a review of the literature

Christine Skelton 

2. The Place of Women in Teacher Education: discourses of power

Meg Maguire and Gaby Weiner 

3. Teacher Stress: directions for future research

Chris Kyriacou

4. Teachers as ‘managed professionals’ in the global education industry: the New Zealand experience

John Codd 

5. Teacher job satisfaction: the importance of school working conditions and teacher characteristics

Anna Toropova, Eva Myrberg and Stefan Johansson 

Part II: Family and community

Marion Bowl and Jane Martin 

6. The family group

M.E. Brittain

7. Secondary schools as communities

Joan A. M. Davis

8. Challenging the status quo: the enabling role of gender sensitive fathers, inspirational mothers and surrogate parents in Uganda

Molly Warrington

9. Barriers to parental involvement in education: an explanatory model

Garry Hornby and Rayleen Lafaele

10. Effects of parental involvement on academic achievement: a meta-synthesis

S. Wilder

11. Parental involvement to parental engagement: a continuum

Janet Goodall and Caroline Montgomery

Part III: Exclusion and inequality in education

Marion Bowl and Jane Martin

12. “Inclusion in Practice”: does practice make perfect?

Roger Slee

13. Why poor children are more likely to become poor readers: the early years

Jennifer Buckingham, Robyn Beaman and Kevin Wheldall

14. Coincidence or conspiracy? Whiteness, policy and the persistence of the Black/White achievement gap

David Gillborn 

15. Whose justice is this! Capitalism, class and education justice and inclusion in the Nordic countries: race, space and class history

Dennis Beach

16. Supporting transgender students in schools: beyond an individualist approach to trans inclusion in the education system

Wayne Martino, Jenny Kassen and Kenan Omercajic

Part IV: Identity and diversity

Marion Bowl and Jane Martin

17. Evaluative reactions to accents

Howard Giles

18. Cultural and Linguistic Diversity in Education: a mainstream issue?

Jim Cummins

19. Gendered perceptions of schooling: classroom dynamics and inequalities within four Caribbean secondary schools

Mike Younger and Mary Cobbett

20. Beyond responsiveness to identity badges: future research on culture in disability and implications for Response to Intervention

Alfredo J. Artiles

21. Autism, intense interests and support in school: from wasted efforts to shared understandings

Rebecca Wood

22. Who’s checkin’ for Black girls and women in the “pandemic within a pandemic”? COVID-19, Black Lives Matter and educational implications

April-Louise Pennant

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