Buch, Englisch, 1662 Seiten, Previously published in hardcover, Format (B × H): 155 mm x 235 mm, Gewicht: 2897 g
Buch, Englisch, 1662 Seiten, Previously published in hardcover, Format (B × H): 155 mm x 235 mm, Gewicht: 2897 g
Reihe: Springer International Handbooks of Education
ISBN: 978-94-024-0805-8
Verlag: Springer
Zielgruppe
Research
Autoren/Hrsg.
Weitere Infos & Material
Preface: How the Handbook Came into Being; Paul Smeyers .- General Introduction; Morwenna Griffiths, David Bridges, Nicholas C. Burbules, and Paul Smeyers .- The Theoretical Landscape.- Varieties of Interpretation in Educational Research: How we frame the project; Nicholas C. Burbules, David Bridges, Morwenna Griffiths, and Paul Smeyers .- Interpretation, Social Science, and Educational Research; Deborah Kerdeman .- Ethical Problems of Interpretation in Educational Research; Margaret D. LeCompte .- “A Demand for Philosophy”: Interpretation, educational research, and transformative practice; Michael Peters .- GENRE 1: Narrative Approaches .- 1.0 Introduction; Marilyn Johnston-Parsons and Michael Watts .- 1.1 Historical Narratives in Ethiopia; Amare Asgedom and Barbara Ridley .- 1.2 Interpreting Street Narratives of Children and Parents in Indonesia; Sophie Dewayani .- 1.3 A Rhetorical Approach to Classroom Narrative Study: Interpreting narration as an ethical resource for teaching in the United States; Mary Juzwik .- 1.4 Dialogue in Narrative Inquiry: Collaboration in doctoral study in the United States; Yuni SariAmalia, Daniel Johnson Mardones, Marilyn Johnston-Parsons, Wendi Shen, Yun Sun Shin and Jason Swanson .- 1.5 Narrative and the Transmission of Traditions: Informal learning among italian artisan stone carvers; Amy Shuman .- 1.6 Ethnography of Primary School Teaching in Tanzania; Sharon Tao .- 1.7 Life History Research and the Interpretation of Working Class Success in Higher Education in the United Kingdom; Michael F Watts .- 1.8 An Awareness of the Feminist Subject: An example of collective biography writing in poststructuralist discourse practice; Monne Wihlborg .- GENRE 2: Analysis of Language and Significations. - 2.0 Introduction; Jane Mulderrig and Vally Lytra .- 2.1 Using Critical Discourse Analysis to Interpret Educational Policy on School Exclusion in England and Wales; Yo Dunn .- 2.2 Interpreting Websites in Educational Contexts: A social-semiotic, multimodal approach; Emilia Djonov, John S. Knox, and Sumin Zhao .- 2.3 Critical Discourse Analysis and Participatory Action Research in the Netherlands: A new approach to shared processes of interpretation in educational research; Nicolina Montesano Montessori and Hans Schuman .- 2.4 Discourses of Intercultural Communication and Education; Karin Zotzmann .- 2.5 Literacy in the Community: The interpretation of ‘local’ literacy practices through ethnography; Kate Pahl .- 2.6 Touch Points and Tacit Practices: How videogame designers help literacy studies; Jennifer Rowsell .- 2.7 ‘Enabling’ Participatory Governance in Education: A corpus-based critical analysis of policy in the United Kingdom; Jane Mulderrig .- 2.8 Moving from "Interesting Data" to a Publishable Research Article - Some interpretive and representational dilemmas in a linguistic ethnographic analysis of an English literacy lesson; Julia Snell and Adam Lefstein .- GENRE 3: Ethnography of Education: Sociological and anthropological approaches. - 3.0 Introduction; Francesca Gobbo and Kathryn Anderson-Levitt .- 3.1 People “of Passage”: An intercultural educator’s interpretation of diversity and cultural identity in Italy; Francesca Gobbo .- 3.2 Constructing Collaborative Interpretations. Children as co-researchers in an ethnographic study in Argentina; Diana Milstein .- 3.3 Learning to Survive in Sri Lanka: Education and training in times of catastrophe; Mara Benadusi .- 3.4 Negotiating the Boundaries Within: An anthropologist at home in a multiethnic neighborhood in urban Japan; Yuko Okubo .- 3.5 Us and Them – What categories reveal about Roma and non-Roma in the Czech Republic; David Doubek, Marketa Levinska .- 3.6 Working Backwards – A methodological autobiography; Deborah Golden .- 3.7 Observing Schools in Disadvantaged Neighborhoods in France; Jean-Paul Payet .- 3.8 Doubly Reflexive Ethnography for Collaborative Research in Mexico; Gunther Dietz and Aurora Álvarez Veinguer .- GENRE 4: Ethnography in Educational Research: Applying ethnographic methods in educational inquiry. - 4.0 Introduction; Dennis Beach and Elina Lahelma .- 4.1 On the Subject of Sex: An ethnographic approach to gender, sexuality and sexual learning in England; Mary Jane Kehily .- 4.2 The ‘Gay Eye’ of a Researcher and a Student in a Hungarian School: Autoethnography as critical interpretation of the subject; György Mészáros .- 4.3 ‘Of Time and the City’: Young people’s ethnographic accounts of identity and urban experience in Canada; Jo-Anne Dillabough and Philip Gardner .- 4.4 Interpreting Visual (and Verbal) Data: Teenagers’ views on belonging to a language minority group in Finland; Gunilla Holm, Monica Londen and Jan-Erik Mansikka .- 4.5 Interpreting Education Policy and Primary Teachers’ Work in England; Geoff Troman and Bob Jeffrey .- 4.6 Mediating Systemic Change through Socio-Cultural Methods in Educational Systems in the United States; Elizabeth B. Kozleski and Alfredo J. Artiles .- 4.7 Changing Teacher Education in Sweden? A meta-ethnographic analysis based on three long term policy-ethnographic investigations; Dennis Beach, Anita Eriksson and Catarina Player-Koro .- 4.8 Problematizing Evaluative Categorisations: Collaborative and multi-sited interpretations of constructions of normality in Estonia and Finland; Sirpa Lappalainen, Elina Lahelma and Reetta Mietola .- GENRE 5: Historical Approaches. - 5.0 Introduction; Lynn Fendler and Marc Depaepe .- 5.1 A Footnote to Plato: Interpreting the history of secondary education in mid 20 th century England; Gary McCulloch .- 5.2 Silences and Interpretations: Historical approaches in understanding classroom teachers from the past; Philip Gardner .- 5.3 Liminality: Interpreting research on learning in the context of the History of Childhood; Theresa Richardson .- 5.4 Interpretation in an Historical Approach to Reading; Anne-Marie Chartier .- 5.5 Curriculum History and Interpretation; Barry M. Franklin and Richard K. Nye .- 5.6 Vocational Education, Gender and Inequality in Hamburg, Germany 1849-1914; Christine Mayer .- 5.7 Educational Policy in Historical Perspective: Interpreting the macro and the micro politics of schooling; Inés Dussel .- 5.8 Non-formal Education on Display; Karin Priem .- GENRE 6: Philosophical Approaches. - 6.0 Introduction; Yusef Waghid .- 6.1 Indigenous Students’ Learning of School Science: A philosophical interpretation; Lesley Le Grange .- 6.2 Teaching and Learning for Citizenship in a Post-Apartheid South African University Classroom: An interpretive interlude; Yusef Waghid .- 6.3 Language, Meaning and the Other in Curriculum Research; Christine Winter .- 6.4 The Open Space of Liberal Democracy: Interpreting the national tests of citizenship competencies in Colombia; Andrés Mejía .- 6.5 A “Jill” of All Trades and Mistress of One: Interpretation, school leadership and philosophy of education; Janet Orchard .- 6.6 Philosophical Approaches to Educational Research: Justice, democracy and education; Penny Enslin and Mary Tjiattas .- 6.7 Education Policy from the Perspective of Governmentality; Maarten Simons .- 6.8 Philosophy at Work in the Study of Parenting and Parenting Support in Flanders; Stefan Ramaekers .- GENRE 7 : Quantitative Approaches. - 7.0 Introduction; Paul Smeyers .- 7.1 Interpretation in the Process of Designing Effective Learning Materials: A design-based research example; Ellen Vanderhoven, Annelies Raes and Tammy Schellens .- 7.2 Interpretation of Research on Technology Integration in Teacher Education in the United States: Preparation and current practices; Anne Ottenbreit-Leftwich, Peggy A. Ertmer and Jo Tondeur .- 7.3 Theory-driven Evaluation Studies: Establishing links between research, policy, and practice; Leonidas Kyriakides .- 7.4 Juxtaposing Interpretations of Research on School Principalship; Marta C. Azaola and Anthony Kelly.- 7.5 Researching Equity and Effectiveness in Education: Examples from the UK and Germany; Pamela Sammons and Yvonne Anders .- 7.6 Beyond the Quantification of Irregular Migrants: From ‘knowledge on the case’ to ‘knowing how to go on’; Elias Hemelsoet .- 7.7 Interpreting Statistics in an English Team-based Evaluation; Peter Bowbrick .- 7.8 Making Sense of Layers of Interpretation in Quantitative Educational Research; Paul Smeyers .- GENRE 8: Cultural-transgressive Approaches. - 8.0 Introduction; Robert A. Davis .- 8.1 Hermeneutics of Linguistic Ethnography: Teachers and students losing and finding their voices; Robert A. Davis .- 8.2 Making an Appearance on the Shelves of the Room We Call Research: Autoethnography-as-storyline-as-interpretation in research; Elisabeth Mackinlay .- 8.3 Critical Interdisciplinarity and Noticing Absences; Heather Greenhalgh-Spencer .- 8.4 Theorizing Relational Privacy: Embodied Perspectives to Support Ethical Professional Pedagogies; David C Lundie .- 8.5 Interpreting the International and Intra-national ‘Translation’ of Educational Policy and Practice: A case of opportunism, serendipity and bricolage; David Bridges, Kairat Kurakbayev and Assel Kambatyrova .- 8.6 Five Conversations and Three Notes on the ‘Soviet’, or Finding a Place for Personal History in the Study of Teacher Education Policy in Kazakhstan; Olena Fimyar .- 8.7 Masks as Methodology and the Phenomenological Turn: Issues of interpretation; Ruth Leitch and James C. Conroy .- 8.8 Writing and the Articulation of Disciplinary Identifications: A psychoanalytic exploration of methodological practice; Claudia Lapping .- 8.9 Strange Attractors: Myth, dream and memory in educational methodology; Alan McManus .- Afterword; David Bridges, Nicholas C. Burbules, Morwenna Griffiths, and Paul Smeyers .




