Rebellious Education - by Adam W Jordan & Todd S Hawley & Sonya Wisdom & Tracey Hunter-Doniger (Paperback)
About this item
Highlights
- Featuring accounts of P-12 educators, Rebellious Education: Joyful Teaching as Resistance in the American South and Appalachia offers a rebellious counter-narrative to the modern tale that teaching is a profession void of joy.
- About the Author: Adam W. Jordan is an Associate Professor of Special Education at the College of Charleston, USA, where he also currently serves as the director of Special Education programs and as the Associate Chair of the Department of Teacher Education.
- 236 Pages
- Education, Multicultural Education
Description
About the Book
Teachers in Southern and Appalachian spaces reveal their experiences of enacting their practice in challenging situations, balanced with purposeful pedagogies and powerful accounts of teaching as an act of joyful resistance, pushing back against the false narratives plaguing the profession.
Book Synopsis
Featuring accounts of P-12 educators, Rebellious Education: Joyful Teaching as Resistance in the American South and Appalachia offers a rebellious counter-narrative to the modern tale that teaching is a profession void of joy. Like the teaching profession itself, the American South and Appalachia are areas with juxtaposed narratives, both romanticized and villainized in popular culture. In this book, teachers in Southern and Appalachian spaces reveal their experiences of enacting their practice in challenging situations, but this is balanced with purposeful pedagogies and powerful accounts of teaching as an act of joyful resistance, pushing back against the stereotypes and false narratives currently plaguing the profession.
This book is written for educators to provide a collection of accounts that offer hope and resilience to those working to make our schools better places in geographic locations that often experience lower pay and less support. The book also serves as a tool to help motivate and sustain beginning and veteran teachers alike; it provides a community of voices against the ever-present message that teaching is not a profession worth pursuing.
About the Author
Adam W. Jordan is an Associate Professor of Special Education at the College of Charleston, USA, where he also currently serves as the director of Special Education programs and as the Associate Chair of the Department of Teacher Education.
Todd S. Hawley is a Professor of Social Studies Teacher Education and Coordinator for Social Studies Education at Kent State University, USA.
Sonya Wisdom is Professor of Science Education at Kent State University, USA.
Tracey Hunter-Doniger is a Professor and the Department Chair of Teacher Education at the College of Charleston, USA.