Women Teaching for Change: Gender, Class and PowerBloomsbury Academic, 1988 - 174 pages Applying theory to practice, Women Teaching for Change reveals the complexity of being a feminist teacher in a public school setting, in which the forces of sexism, racism, and classism, which so characterize society as a whole, are played out in multiracial, multicultural classrooms. A fine book, a rich melding of critical theory in education, feminist literature, and pedagogical experience and expertise. Maxine Green, Columbia University |
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... deeply ingrained in those institutional practices that shape how time , space , language , and rules constitute and legitimate schooling as a wider field of systematic power and control.3 For Weiler , the school is a matrix of ...
... deeply than sexism . Of course sexism , I don't know , it's there but I think what really hurt me more emotionally was this thing about racism.1 Women of color felt that because of their race , teaching was one of the few jobs for which ...
... deeply involved with the reformers . This involvement deeply influenced them and their view of their own work . These schools also felt the effects of the social unrest of the 1960s and 1970s . Both schools are racially mixed and ...
Table des matières
CHAPTER TWO Feminist Analyses of Gender | 27 |
CHAPTER THREE Feminist Methodology | 57 |
CHAPTER FOUR The Dialectics of Gender in | 73 |
Droits d'auteur | |
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