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Intersectional Pedagogy explores best practices for effective teaching and learning about intersections of identity as informed by intersectional theory. Formatted in three easy-to-follow sections, this collection explores the pedagogy of intersectionality to address lived experiences that result from privileged and oppressed identities. After an initial overview of intersectional foundations and theory, the collection offers classroom strategies and approaches for teaching and learning about intersectionality and social justice. With contributions from scholars in education, psychology, sociology and women’s studies, Intersectional Pedagogy include a range of disciplinary perspectives and evidence-based pedagogy.
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Gender identity and sexuality play crucial roles in the educational experiences of students, parents, and teachers. Teacher education must more directly address the ways that schools reflect and reproduce oppressive gender norms, working to combat homophobia, transphobia, heteronormativity, and gendered expectations in schools. This volume examines teacher candidates’ experiences with gender and sexuality in the classroom, offering insight and strategies to better prepare teachers and teacher educators to support LGBTQ youth and families. This volume addresses the need for broader, more in-depth qualitative data describing teacher candidates’ responses to diversity in the classroom (including gender, sexuality, race, class and religion). By using pedagogical tools such as narrative writing and positioning theory, teacher candidates explore these issues to better understand their own students’ narratives in deeply embodied ways. This book calls for schools to be places where oppression, in all its complexity, is explored and challenged rather than replicated.
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« Community-Based Research, or CBR, is a mix of innovative, participatory approaches that put the community at the heart of the research process. Learning and Teaching Community-Based Research shows that CBR can also operate as an innovative pedagogical practice, engaging community members, research experts, and students. This collection is an unmatched source of information on the theory and practice of using CBR in a variety of university- and community-based educational settings. Developed at and around the University of Victoria, and with numerous examples of Indigenous-led and Indigenous-focused approaches to CBR, Learning and Teaching Community Based-Research will be of interest to those involved in community outreach, experiential learning, and research in non-university settings, as well as all those interested in the study of teaching and learning » (4e de couverture)
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Les garçons québécois vont-ils aussi mal à l’école que certains le prétendent en les présentant comme un groupe homogène victime d’un système scolaire féminisé et discriminatoire ? Faut-il donner à tous les garçons un soutien spécifique basé sur la non-mixité, les stéréotypes sexuels, un plus grand nombre d’hommes enseignants et une pédagogie calquée sur le jeu et le sport ? Au moyen de données internationales et québécoises, dont plusieurs proviennent du ministère de l’Éducation du Québec, Jean-Claude St-Amant analyse la situation des garçons québécois par rapport à celle des filles et à celle de groupes de garçons et de filles du Canada et d’autres pays occidentaux. Cette mise en perspective révèle des faits peu connus du public et même d’une partie du personnel enseignant. Par exemple, que les garçons réussissent aussi bien que les filles dans toutes les matières, excepté en lecture et écriture. Les enseignant-es ont tendance à surestimer les difficultés scolaires des garçons et à sous-estimer celles des filles, sans doute sous l’effet de la propagande médiatique qu’alimentent des masculinistes alarmistes. Le chercheur propose une politique de la réussite scolaire qui a fait ses preuves dans divers contextes, tant pour les garçons que pour les filles. À qui s’adresse ce livre ? Le personnel enseignant, le futur personnel enseignant, les parents, les étudiants et les étudiantes des niveaux secondaire, collégial et universitaire, le public en général. Celles et ceux qui ont à coeur l’avenir des jeunes du Québec.