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  • av Michael Fullan
    440 - 1 205,-

  •  
    495,-

    The introduction of widely available generative AI tools has caused a frenzy of both positive and negative reactions. Between utopian visions and apocalyptic predictions of AI's impact on education, there is a need to thoughtfully consider what education in the age of AI can and should look like. This volume focuses on the implications of AI technology for teachers in K-12 and university settings, providing a careful look at its affordances and drawbacks for social studies curriculum and teaching. Scholars specializing in the field of social studies education provide information and practical ideas for teaching with current technology, alongside frameworks for thinking about future iterations of AI. This book fills a critical need, especially among educators, to consider the current and potential future impacts of AI while avoiding the traps of alarmism or techno-utopianism. Whether skeptical or enthusiastic about AI, every social studies educator will find something useful to their practice in this book. Book Features: First-ever compilation of AI considerations and strategies in the context of social studies education Nontechnical explanations of what AI can do (and not do) in practical educational contexts to enable educators to approach its use with careful judgment Advice for educators to help them assess future iterations of AI technology Critical considerations of AI across multiple contexts (e.g., ethics, equity, multilingual learners, cybersecurity) Work from leaders in technology and social studies education across Canada and the United States

  • av Herbert P. Ginsburg
    492 - 1 270,-

  • av Gwen Agna
    556 - 1 515,-

  • av Cynthia Ballenger
    518 - 1 359,-

  •  
    1 359,-

    This powerful resource is for researchers and educational leaders who are interested in understanding and applying research methods that emphasize youth voice. The authors argue that most educational research either omits critical understandings of youth or, even worse, presents inaccuracies due to faulty techniques. Researching how youth experience their schools and communities requires specific conceptual tools that address researcher bias, power dynamics, and the contextual considerations that impact meaning-making processes. Responding to these issues, the authors present the Student Voice Research Framework--an approach that both novice and advanced researchers can use to address assumptions and overcome bias as they engage with youth. Readers are provided with clear steps for implementing the framework, as well as examples of how some of the most innovative qualitative and quantitative researchers in the world are using it. The text includes numerous interview, survey, and other protocols with strategies that researchers can use immediately or adapt for their own studies. This comprehensive volume is a must-have for anyone doing research about and with youth. Book Features: Guidance for addressing persistent problems of bias in educational inquiry to better engage in study about and with students. Examination of student voice research as its own field with its own typologies and research questions. Chapters highlighting innovative qualitative and quantitative research methods and strategies with ready-to-use protocols and other tools. A forward-looking conversation about social justice and what democracy could look like in schools. A toolkit of research methods and school change processes to address difficult questions in education.

  •  
    543

    This powerful resource is for researchers and educational leaders who are interested in understanding and applying research methods that emphasize youth voice. The authors argue that most educational research either omits critical understandings of youth or, even worse, presents inaccuracies due to faulty techniques. Researching how youth experience their schools and communities requires specific conceptual tools that address researcher bias, power dynamics, and the contextual considerations that impact meaning-making processes. Responding to these issues, the authors present the Student Voice Research Framework--an approach that both novice and advanced researchers can use to address assumptions and overcome bias as they engage with youth. Readers are provided with clear steps for implementing the framework, as well as examples of how some of the most innovative qualitative and quantitative researchers in the world are using it. The text includes numerous interview, survey, and other protocols with strategies that researchers can use immediately or adapt for their own studies. This comprehensive volume is a must-have for anyone doing research about and with youth. Book Features: Guidance for addressing persistent problems of bias in educational inquiry to better engage in study about and with students. Examination of student voice research as its own field with its own typologies and research questions. Chapters highlighting innovative qualitative and quantitative research methods and strategies with ready-to-use protocols and other tools. A forward-looking conversation about social justice and what democracy could look like in schools. A toolkit of research methods and school change processes to address difficult questions in education.

  • av Barbara T. Bowman
    413 - 1 191,-

  • av Robyn Seglem & Sarah Bonner
    456 - 1 256,-

  • av Ginger Fifer, Elias Blinkoff, Carol Lautenbach, m.fl.
    413 - 1 191,-

  • av Elizabeth Hale
    466 - 1 184,-

  • av Harry Wong & Adam H. Frank
    435 - 1 126,-

  • av Dianna Townsend
    470 - 1 184,-

  •  
    1 321,-

    "Featuring the work of historians, researchers, and classroom teachers, this volume addresses the complexities of teaching and learning about race and racism in the secondary history classroom. Readers will learn how to help young people critique the nation's legacy of racial inequality, as well as understand the historical movements to disrupt inequality"--

  •  
    484

    "Featuring the work of historians, researchers, and classroom teachers, this volume addresses the complexities of teaching and learning about race and racism in the secondary history classroom. Readers will learn how to help young people critique the nation's legacy of racial inequality, as well as understand the historical movements to disrupt inequality"--

  • av Christopher C. Jett
    451 - 1 288,-

  • av Janette Klingner & Beth Harry
    471 - 1 295,-

  • av Meredith Madden, Kimberly Williams Brown & Colette N. Cann
    443 - 1 168,-

  • av FOUBERT BANKS
    497 - 1 239,-

  • av COLLET TSCHANNEN-MO
    456 - 1 561,-

  • av CHOI HUGGINS
    467 - 1 168,-

  • av CANTRELL WALKER-DAL
    516 - 1 267,-

  • av Linda Lambert
    401

  • - Bridging Out-of-school Literacies with Classroom Practice
     
    362,-

    This study uses research on literacy outside of school to challenge how we think about literacy inside of school. It seeks to bridge the divide in the literature between formal education and the many informal settings - homes, after-school programmes - in which literacy learning flourishes.

  • - Improving Teacher Practice and Early Childhood Learning (Wisdom from an Experienced Classroom Observer)
    av Cindy Rzasa Bess
    375

    A book about what it takes to be an exceptional early childhood teacher. It examines various classroom scenarios and describes how teaching was done well or how it could be done better. It includes: an overview of the stages of early childhood development; and, descriptions of high-quality early childhood education settings and materials.

  • - Negotiating Standards in a High-Performing Bilingual School
    av Lauren Anderson, Mercedes K. Schneider & Jamy Stillman
    485 - 929,-

    In schools serving high concentrations of bilingual learners, it can be especially challenging for teachers to maintain commitments to equity minded instruction while meeting the demands of new educational policies, including national standards. This book details how one school integrated equity pedagogy into standards-based curriculum and produced exemplary levels of achievement.

  • av Michael Neal
    419

    How can educators understand writing assessment as and with technology in the 21st-century classroom? Thisl contends that new technologies are neither the problem nor the solution. Instead, educators need to tap into digital resources only inasmuch as they promote writing and its assessment as rhetorical with authentic purposes, audiences, and contexts.

  • - The Power and Promise of Individual Attention
    av Jessica Hoffmann Davis
    343

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