Mainstreams, Margins and the Spaces In-between

Mainstreams, Margins and the Spaces In-between
Title Mainstreams, Margins and the Spaces In-between PDF eBook
Author Karen Trimmer
Publisher Routledge
Pages 301
Release 2014-11-20
Genre Education
ISBN 1317694597

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This book explores the complexities of investigating minorities, majorities, boundaries and borders, and the experiences of researchers who choose to work in these spaces. It engages with issues of ethics, disclosure and representation, and contends with and seeks to contribute to emerging debates around power and the positioning of researchers and participants. Chapters examine epistemologies that shape researchers’ beliefs about the forms of research that are valued in educational research and theory, and consider the importance of research that genuinely seeks to explore voice, culture, story, authenticity and identity. Resisting the backdrop of standardisation, performativity and accountability agendas pervading governments and organisations, the book attends to the stories of real people, to understand regional and rural landscapes, to examine culture and the human condition and to give voice to those at the fringes of society who remain largely neglected and unheard. Drawing largely on studies from Australia, the book provides an overview of the many types of research being engaged in, revealing the value of different kinds of research, and gaining insight into how meaning and findings are disseminated in research and educational sectors and back into the contexts where research takes place. Mainstreams, Margins and the Spaces In-between will be of key interest to early career researchers and academics internationally, as well as postgraduate students completing research methods courses in the field of education, and the wider social sciences.

From Margin to Center

From Margin to Center
Title From Margin to Center PDF eBook
Author Julie H. Reiss
Publisher MIT Press
Pages 212
Release 2001
Genre Architecture
ISBN 9780262681346

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This is the first book-length study of installation art. JulieReiss concentrates on some of the central figures in its emergence,including artists, critics, and curators.

Interrogating Belonging for Young People in Schools

Interrogating Belonging for Young People in Schools
Title Interrogating Belonging for Young People in Schools PDF eBook
Author Christine Halse
Publisher Springer
Pages 356
Release 2018-06-05
Genre Education
ISBN 3319752170

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In an era when many young people feel marginalized and excluded, this is the first comprehensive, critical account to shed new light on the trouble of ‘belonging’ and how young people in schools understand, enact and experience ‘belonging’ (and non-belonging). It traverses diverse dimensions of identity, including gender and sexuality; race, class, nation and citizenship; and place and space. Each section includes a provocative discussion by an eminent and international youth scholar of youth, and is essential reading for anyone involved with young people and schools. This book is a crucial resource and reference for sociology of education courses at all levels as well as courses in student inclusion, equity and student well-being.

From the Margins to the Mainstream

From the Margins to the Mainstream
Title From the Margins to the Mainstream PDF eBook
Author Marianne Kac-Vergne
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing
Pages 313
Release 2022-07-14
Genre Social Science
ISBN 1350120189

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This book explores the various issues raised by women's fraught integration into the mainstream in film and television, whether it be off screen as filmmakers and film critics or on screen in film and TV series. Marianne Kac-Vergne and Julie Assouly consider the varied representations of women in films such as Jackie Brown (1997), Marie Antoinette (2006), It's a Free World... (2007) and Wonder Woman (2017). They particularly look into the overlooked gendered aspects of voice-overs and the adverse tropes used to represent maternity in television series as well as the complex motif of the vagina dentata in contemporary film and television. The chapters analyze independent, art-house, Hollywood and TV productions often in transnational contexts, shedding light on how definitions of femininity are culturally specific yet cross national, class and racial lines. The contributors include renowned scholars such as Yvonne Tasker, Celestino Deleyto, David Roche and Nicole Cloarec, as well as emerging yet well-published film scholars.

Curriculum, Schooling and Applied Research

Curriculum, Schooling and Applied Research
Title Curriculum, Schooling and Applied Research PDF eBook
Author Jennifer Donovan
Publisher Springer Nature
Pages 275
Release 2020-10-15
Genre Education
ISBN 3030488225

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This book explores how teachers can navigate the complex process of managing change within the classroom. The chapters highlight the new challenges that have arisen with the emergence and introduction of educational technology as teachers find themselves having to be responsive to the needs and demands of multiple stakeholders. Traversing a range of conceptual, disciplinary and methodological boundaries, the editors and contributors investigate the tensions that impinge on research-based change and how to integrate directed changes into their education system and classroom. Subsequently, this volume argues that posing these questions leads to increased understanding of the possible long term effects of educational change, and how teachers can know whether their solutions are effective.

Learning Disability and Everyday Life

Learning Disability and Everyday Life
Title Learning Disability and Everyday Life PDF eBook
Author Alex Cockain
Publisher Taylor & Francis
Pages 294
Release 2024-03-29
Genre Social Science
ISBN 1003860303

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Learning Disability and Everyday Life brings into conversation ideas from social theory with “thick” descriptions of the everyday life of a middle-aged man with learning disabilities and autism. This book is markedly ethnographic in its orientation to the gritty graininess of everyday life—eating, drinking, walking, cooking, talking, and so on—in, with, and alongside learning disability. However, preoccupation with, the “small” coexists with a gaze intent upon capturing a bigger picture, to the extent that the things constituting everyday life are deployed as prisms through and with which to critically reflect upon the wider worlds of dis/ability and everyday life. Such attention to the small and the big—the micro and the macro—allows this book to explore the ordinary and everyday ways meanings about normalcy and abnormalcy, ability and disability, are put together, enacted, practised, made (up)—in the sense of constituting and fabricating—and, crucially, accomplished through and between people in specific, and invariably contingent, sociocultural, discursive, and material conditions of possibility. This book will be of specific interest not only to students and scholars of disability but also to persons with lived experiences of disability. This book will also be of interest to students and scholars of anthropology and sociology.

A Concise History of the Netherlands

A Concise History of the Netherlands
Title A Concise History of the Netherlands PDF eBook
Author James C. Kennedy
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Pages 505
Release 2017-07-13
Genre History
ISBN 0521875889

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This book offers a comprehensive yet compact history of this surprisingly little-known but fascinating country, from pre-history to the present.