1st Edition

Composing Diverse Identities Narrative Inquiries into the Interwoven Lives of Children and Teachers

    208 Pages
    by Routledge

    208 Pages
    by Routledge

    In a climate of increasing emphasis on testing, measurable outcomes, competition and efficiency, the real lives of children and their teachers are often neglected or are too messy and intricate to legislate and quantify. As such, curricula are designed without including the very people that compose the identities of schools. Here Clandinin takes issue with this tendency, bringing together a collection of narratives from seven writers who spent a year in an urban school, exploring the experiences and contributions of children, families, teachers and administrators. These stories show us an alternative way of attending to what counts in schools, shifting away from the school as a business model towards an idea of schools as places to engage citizenship and to attend to the wholeness of people’s lives.

    Articulating the complex ethical dilemmas and issues that face people and schools every day, this fascinating study puts school life under the microscope raises new questions about who and what education is for.

    1. A Narrative Understanding of Lives in Schools  2. Working Alongside Children, Teachers, Parents, and Administrators in Relational Narrative Inquiry  3. Children’s Stories to Live By: Teachers’ Stories of Children  4. Children’s Fictionalized Stories to Live By  5. Children’s and Teachers’ Stories to Live By in a School Story of Character Education  6. Living Alongside Children Shapes an Administrator’s Stories to Live By  7. Shifting Stories to Live By: Interweaving the Personal and Professional in Teachers’ Lives  8. Living in Tension: Negotiating a Curriculum of Lives  9. Composing Stories to Live By: Interrupting the Story of School  10. Afterword.  References

    Biography

    D. Jean Clandinin is Professor and Director of the Centre for Research for Teacher Education and Development at the University of Alberta, Canada. Janice Huber and Anne Murray Orr are Assistant Professors at St. Francis Xavier University, Canada. Marilyn Huber is a doctoral student at the University of Alberta, Canada. Marni Pearce is a senior education manager with the Alberta Government.  M. Shaun Murphy is a Research Associate and Pam Steeves is an Adjunct Assistant Professor at the University of Alberta, Canada.

    'I recommend this book wholeheartedly for its realness, centredness, courage and compassion.' - Teachers and Teaching: Theory and Practice