Maker Pedagogy - (Emerald Points) by Bridget Looney (Hardcover)
About this item
Highlights
- In traditional schooling, language and literacy development are often prioritized at the expense of early engagement with science, social studies, and the arts.
- About the Author: Bridget Looney is an Adjunct Professor and Researcher at Montclair State University, USA.
- 184 Pages
- Education, Learning Styles
- Series Name: Emerald Points
Description
About the Book
Maker pedagogy's focus on democratic participation, equity, and empowerment extends to school leadership where it calls upon teachers, students, and those in formal school leadership roles to examine and develop school policies and practices together.
Book Synopsis
In traditional schooling, language and literacy development are often prioritized at the expense of early engagement with science, social studies, and the arts. Content rich, inquiry-based learning is typically delayed--especially in the early years. Maker Pedagogy: A Paradigm for Teaching, Learning, and Leading in the Modern School challenges this model by presenting an inclusive, transdisciplinary approach to learning rooted in children's natural ways of exploring and understanding the world.
In maker-centered classrooms, students collaborate, problem-solve, and engage with meaningful content through hands-on experiences that foster creativity, agency, and persistence. Rather than isolating "making" as a separate subject or reserving it for specialized spaces, Bridget Looney positions maker pedagogy as a flexible, equitable framework for teaching and learning across grade levels and content areas.
Grounded in empirical research, this book showcases how K-12 teachers have implemented maker pedagogy with varying levels of institutional support. Through richly detailed case studies, Looney explores the affordances and tensions of integrating making into school culture, curriculum, and leadership--providing insight into what supports inclusive, sustained, and child-centered innovation. Maker pedagogy's focus on democratic participation, equity, and empowerment extends to school leadership where it calls upon teachers, students, and those in formal school leadership roles to examine and develop school policies and practices together.
About the Author
Bridget Looney is an Adjunct Professor and Researcher at Montclair State University, USA. Bridget is a former elementary educator who has been working in the field of education for over 25 years. She holds a PhD in teacher education, an EdS in educational leadership, and an MA in early childhood and elementary education. Her research provides a unique perspective on how makerspaces and maker pedagogy can fit into the school setting through teacher-led initiatives.