Identity Work in the Classroom

Successful Learning in Urban Schools

Nonfiction, Reference & Language, Education & Teaching, Teaching, Teaching Methods
Cover of the book Identity Work in the Classroom by Cheryl Jones-Walker, Teachers College Press
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Cheryl Jones-Walker ISBN: 9780807774076
Publisher: Teachers College Press Publication: December 15, 2009
Imprint: Language: English
Author: Cheryl Jones-Walker
ISBN: 9780807774076
Publisher: Teachers College Press
Publication: December 15, 2009
Imprint:
Language: English

This book provides classroom examples to demonstrate how identity-making is integral to the teaching and learning process. Responding to school reform efforts that focus on top-down reform measures, this book proposes “identity work” as an alternative approach. The author argues that efforts to improve urban schools should recognize the importance of relational change that focuses on deepening personal interactions between students and teachers, teachers and other teachers, and schools and parents. Based on an in-depth study of two classrooms in urban K–8 schools, the book illuminates the importance of allowing teachers the freedom to make pedagogical adjustments based on their knowledge of students’ needs, backgrounds, and interests. This volume reframes our understanding of urban schools and raises questions about the goals of local and federal reform and what is at stake for educational systems.

Book Features:

  • Provides examples of identity work and its potential for creating individual, institutional, and large scale systemic improvement.
  • Identifies how skilled educators make pedagogical decisions that increase student engagement and learning outcomes.
  • Examines the challenges of working within a context of increasing mandates and rigid accountability structures.
  • Advocates for design improvement strategies that rely on the capacities of students, teachers, and community members.
  • Shows how qualitative work that elucidates the experience of students and teachers can inform education policy.

“Identity Work in the Classroom is an extraordinary and compelling book. It is essential reading for teacher-educators, teachers, and community organizers, and it represents the best of contemporary critical school ethnography.”
—From the Foreword by Theresa Perry, Professor of Africana Studies and Education, Simmons College

“Grounded in an urban ecological lens of learning, becoming, and knowing, this book demonstrates how educators navigate and negotiate educational policy and reform through discourse and identity construction. Identity Work in the Classroom represents a powerful exemplar of the kind of discursive practices essential to advance urban education scholarship and actions during challenging and changing times. If you are concerned about policies that shape urban education and the children they impact, read this book.”
H. Richard Milner IV, Helen Faison Professor of Urban Education, University of Pittsburgh

“Identity Work in the Classroom is an indispensable intervention into the research literature on culture, identity, and learning. Using rigorous methodology and sophisticated theoretical frameworks, Jones-Walker spotlights the dynamic interplay between identity work and educational processes. This book offers concrete examples of the ways that schools serve as complex yet fecund sites of identity work, as well as how our teaching and learning processes can be informed by careful and reflective consideration of identity. It is essential reading for teachers, educational leaders, and policymakers alike.”
Marc Lamont Hill, Distinguished Professor of African American Studies, Morehouse College

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

This book provides classroom examples to demonstrate how identity-making is integral to the teaching and learning process. Responding to school reform efforts that focus on top-down reform measures, this book proposes “identity work” as an alternative approach. The author argues that efforts to improve urban schools should recognize the importance of relational change that focuses on deepening personal interactions between students and teachers, teachers and other teachers, and schools and parents. Based on an in-depth study of two classrooms in urban K–8 schools, the book illuminates the importance of allowing teachers the freedom to make pedagogical adjustments based on their knowledge of students’ needs, backgrounds, and interests. This volume reframes our understanding of urban schools and raises questions about the goals of local and federal reform and what is at stake for educational systems.

Book Features:

“Identity Work in the Classroom is an extraordinary and compelling book. It is essential reading for teacher-educators, teachers, and community organizers, and it represents the best of contemporary critical school ethnography.”
—From the Foreword by Theresa Perry, Professor of Africana Studies and Education, Simmons College

“Grounded in an urban ecological lens of learning, becoming, and knowing, this book demonstrates how educators navigate and negotiate educational policy and reform through discourse and identity construction. Identity Work in the Classroom represents a powerful exemplar of the kind of discursive practices essential to advance urban education scholarship and actions during challenging and changing times. If you are concerned about policies that shape urban education and the children they impact, read this book.”
H. Richard Milner IV, Helen Faison Professor of Urban Education, University of Pittsburgh

“Identity Work in the Classroom is an indispensable intervention into the research literature on culture, identity, and learning. Using rigorous methodology and sophisticated theoretical frameworks, Jones-Walker spotlights the dynamic interplay between identity work and educational processes. This book offers concrete examples of the ways that schools serve as complex yet fecund sites of identity work, as well as how our teaching and learning processes can be informed by careful and reflective consideration of identity. It is essential reading for teachers, educational leaders, and policymakers alike.”
Marc Lamont Hill, Distinguished Professor of African American Studies, Morehouse College

More books from Teachers College Press

Cover of the book Beats, Rhymes, and Classroom Life by Cheryl Jones-Walker
Cover of the book We Don't Need Another Hero by Cheryl Jones-Walker
Cover of the book Professional Learning in Action by Cheryl Jones-Walker
Cover of the book Everyday Artists by Cheryl Jones-Walker
Cover of the book Diving In by Cheryl Jones-Walker
Cover of the book Teaching and Learning in a Diverse World by Cheryl Jones-Walker
Cover of the book Seeing the Spectrum by Cheryl Jones-Walker
Cover of the book City Schools and the American Dream by Cheryl Jones-Walker
Cover of the book Social Worlds of Children Learning to Write in an Urban Primary School by Cheryl Jones-Walker
Cover of the book Preparing to Teach Social Studies for Social Justice (Becoming a Renegade) by Cheryl Jones-Walker
Cover of the book From A Nation at Risk to No Child Left Behind by Cheryl Jones-Walker
Cover of the book What If All the Kids Are White, 2nd Ed by Cheryl Jones-Walker
Cover of the book Effective Questioning Strategies in the Classroom by Cheryl Jones-Walker
Cover of the book Be the Change by Cheryl Jones-Walker
Cover of the book Teaching Democracy by Cheryl Jones-Walker
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy