Urban Teaching in America

Urban Teaching in America
Title Urban Teaching in America PDF eBook
Author Andrea J. Stairs
Publisher SAGE
Pages 273
Release 2012
Genre Education
ISBN 1412980607

Download Urban Teaching in America Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

This book provides undergraduate and graduate students in education with an overview of urban teaching. Organized around eight authentic questions, it offers pre-service and in-service teachers opportunities for critical reflection and problem-posing not often seen in comparable course texts. This text supports staff who are looking for increasingly creative approaches to exploring key educational issues with their students.

Research on Urban Teacher Learning

Research on Urban Teacher Learning
Title Research on Urban Teacher Learning PDF eBook
Author Andrea J. Stairs
Publisher IAP
Pages 225
Release 2010-03-01
Genre Education
ISBN 1607524031

Download Research on Urban Teacher Learning Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

This book presents a range of evidence-based analyses focused on the role of contextual factors on urban teacher learning. Part I introduces the reader to the conceptual and empirical literature on urban teacher learning. Part II shares eight research studies that examine how, what, and why urban teachers learn in the form of rich longitudinal studies. Part III analyzes the ways federal, state, and local policies affect urban teacher learning and highlights the synergistic relationship between urban teacher learning and context. What makes this collection powerful is not only that it moves research front and center in discussions of urban teacher learning, but also that it recognizes the importance of learning over time and the way urban schools’ contexts and conditions enable and constrain teacher learning.

Self-Studies in Urban Teacher Education

Self-Studies in Urban Teacher Education
Title Self-Studies in Urban Teacher Education PDF eBook
Author Adrian D. Martin
Publisher Springer Nature
Pages 208
Release 2022-09-12
Genre Education
ISBN 9811954305

Download Self-Studies in Urban Teacher Education Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

This book critically explores pedagogical activities, policies, and coursework that teacher education programs can provide to more fully prepare teacher candidates and in-service educators for professional practice in urban schools. It illustrates how teacher educators from across the United States are supporting teacher candidates and in-service teachers to possess the knowledge, skills, and dispositions for equity-oriented instructional practices and advocacy for professional engagement in the urban context. Chapters share insider perspectives of urban teacher education on preparing teachers to teach in culturally, linguistically, and socio-economically diverse classrooms. They discuss teacher educators’ learning about their own practice in the preparation of teachers for city schools, preparing teacher candidates from rural and suburban contexts to teach in urban settings, and supervising practicing teachers in city classrooms. The volume also focuses on the interplay of cultural and linguistic parity between teacher educators and their preservice/in-service teacher students, implementing learning activities or coursework about teaching in urban schools, and enacting critical pedagogical practices. This book will be beneficial to teacher educators focused on teacher preparation for city classrooms and urban school districts, and researchers seeking to adopt self-study methodology in their own research endeavors.

Urban Teacher Education and Teaching

Urban Teacher Education and Teaching
Title Urban Teacher Education and Teaching PDF eBook
Author R. Patrick Solomon
Publisher Routledge
Pages 280
Release 2020-07-25
Genre Education
ISBN 100010625X

Download Urban Teacher Education and Teaching Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

This volume illuminates the most pressing challenges faced by urban schools, teachers, teacher candidates, and teacher training programs and offers a range of insights and possibilities for urban teacher education and teaching. Covering issues spanning the broadly theoretical to the urgently practical, it goes beyond the traditional discourses in teacher education to focus on diversity, social justice, democratic schooling, and community building. What emerges is an emphatic message of hope for those committed to the ongoing project of improving urban teacher education and working in urban settings. Contributors from Canada, the United States, and the Caribbean bring rich and divergent knowledges, perspectives, and cultural experiences to their discussion of the three central themes around which the book is organized: • the conceptual framing of key issues in urban schooling; • pre-service teacher preparation for urban transformation; and • culturally relevant pedagogy and advocacy in urban settings. This book is intended for all students, practitioners, and researchers involved in urban education. It is appropriate as a text for student teaching and field experience seminars, and for courses dealing with social issues, educational policy, curriculum development, and multicultural teacher education.

Moving Teacher Education into Urban Schools and Communities

Moving Teacher Education into Urban Schools and Communities
Title Moving Teacher Education into Urban Schools and Communities PDF eBook
Author Jana Noel
Publisher Routledge
Pages 258
Release 2013-05-07
Genre Education
ISBN 1136310835

Download Moving Teacher Education into Urban Schools and Communities Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

Winner of the 2013 American Educational Studies Association's Critics Choice Award! When teacher education is located on a university campus, set apart from urban schools and communities, it is easy to overlook the realities and challenges communities face as they struggle toward social, economic, cultural, and racial justice. This book describes how teacher education can become a meaningful part of this work, by re-positioning programs directly into urban schools and communities. Situating their work within the theoretical framework of prioritizing community strengths, each set of authors provides a detailed and nuanced description of a teacher education program re-positioned within an urban school or community. Authors describe the process of developing such a relationship, how the university, school, and community became integrated partners in the program, and the impact on participants. As university-based teacher education has come under increased scrutiny for lack of "real world" relevance, this book showcases programs that have successfully navigated the travails of shifting their base directly into urban schools and communities, with evidence of positive outcomes for all involved.

A Year in the Life of a Third Space Urban Teacher Residency

A Year in the Life of a Third Space Urban Teacher Residency
Title A Year in the Life of a Third Space Urban Teacher Residency PDF eBook
Author Monica Taylor
Publisher Springer
Pages 303
Release 2015-12-01
Genre Education
ISBN 9463002537

Download A Year in the Life of a Third Space Urban Teacher Residency Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

This book weaves together voices of faculty, residents, mentors, administrators, community organizers, and students who have lived together in a third space urban teacher residency program in Newark as they reinvent math and science teaching and teacher education through the lens of inquiry. Each chapter includes narratives from multiple perspectives as well as tools we have used within the program to support and build change, providing readers with both real cases of how an urban teacher residency can impact school systems, and concrete tools and examples to help the reader understand and replicate aspects of the process. Capturing both the successes but also the tensions and challenges, we offer a kaleidoscopic view of the rich, complex, and multi-layered ways in which multiple stakeholders work together to make enduring educational change in urban schools. Our third space NMUTR has been a fragile utopian enterprise, one that has relied on a shared commitment of all involved, and a deep sense of hope that working collaboratively has the potential, even if not perfect, to make a difference.

Research on Urban Teacher Learning

Research on Urban Teacher Learning
Title Research on Urban Teacher Learning PDF eBook
Author Andrea J. Stairs
Publisher Information Age Pub Incorporated
Pages 211
Release 2010
Genre Education
ISBN 9781607524014

Download Research on Urban Teacher Learning Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

This book presents a range of evidence-based analyses focused on the role of contextual factors on urban teacher learning. Part I introduces the reader to the conceptual and empirical literature on urban teacher learning. Part II shares eight research studies that examine how, what, and why urban teachers learn in the form of rich longitudinal studies. Part III analyzes the ways federal, state, and local policies affect urban teacher learning and highlights the synergistic relationship between urban teacher learning and context. What makes this collection powerful is not only that it moves research front and center in discussions of urban teacher learning, but also that it recognizes the importance of learning over time and the way urban schools' contexts and conditions enable and constrain teacher learning. ENDORSEMENTS: This unusual book helps meet the need for more-and better-research about how teachers learn to teach in urban schools and what makes them stay. The book combines trenchant analysis of the current research literature with a rich collection of wisely-selected new longitudinal studies. Researchers, teacher educators, policymakers, and teachers themselves will find the book's insights about teacher preparation, urban school contexts, and teacher learning compelling. - Dr. Marilyn Cochran-Smith, Boston College As an active practitioner in an urban setting, recruiting and retaining outstanding teachers for urban schools is critical to student achievement. Stairs and Donnell's collection exploring the state of affairs of urban teacher learning is a springboard for further research on the importance of investing in urban teaching and learning. Urban teachers must not only teach content but navigate around complex social conditions when working with diverse student populations. Stairs and Donnell's multiple lens approach will assist teacher preparation programs specifically interested in research-based best practices of urban teaching, thus improving teacher quality. - Dr. Jacqueline E. Ash, Nathanael Greene Elementary School