Description
Taylor & Francis Ltd Curriculum Development In The Postmodern Era Teaching And Learning In An Age Of Accountability 3Ed 2012 Edition by Patrick Slattery
This landmark text was one of the first to introduce and analyze contemporary concepts of curriculum that emerged from the Reconceptualization of curriculum studies in the 1970s and 1980s. This new edition brings readers up to date on the major research themes (postmodernism,ecological, hermeneutics, aesthetics and arts-based research, race, class, gender, sexuality, and classroom practices) within the historical development of the field from the 1950s to the present. Like the previous editions, it is unique in providing a comprehensive overview in a relatively short and highly accessible text. Provocative and powerful narratives (both biography and autoethnography) throughout invite readers to engage the complex theories in a personal conversation. School-based examples allow readers to make connections to schools and society, teacher education, and professional development of teachers. Changes in the Third EditionNew Glossary - brief summaries in the text direct readers to the Companion Website to read the entire entriesNew analysis of the current accountability movement in schools including the charter school movement.More international references clearly connected to international contexts More narratives invite readers to engage the complex theories in a personal conversationCompanion Website-new for this edition ContentsPreface to the Third EditionIntroductionPart I Curriculum Development as a Field of Study1. Introduction to Curriculum Development, Reconceptualization, and Postmodernity2. Historical Perspectives on Curriculum as a Field of Study3. The Reconceptualization of Curriculum Studies4. Postmodern Schooling, Curriculum, and the Theological TextPart II Complicated Conversations in Contemporary Curriculum Development5. The Hermeneutic Circle and the Interpretative Process6. Gender, Sexuality, Race, and Ethnicity in a Multicultural and Diverse Milieu7. Postmodern Philosophies in Curriculum Studies8. Curriculum for Interdependence and Ecological Sustainability9. Utopian Visions, Democracy, and the Egalitarian Ideal10. Aesthetic Inquiry, Arts-Based Research, and the Proleptic MomentPart III Curriculum Development in the Postmodern Era11. Time and Complexity12. A Vision of Curriculum in the Postmodern EraGlossaryReferencesSubject IndexName Index