Ten years ago, shortly after being admitted to a graduate English program at a public college in New York City, I was also offered my first academic teaching position. The head of the English department hired me as an adjunct to teach 100-level writing courses. Looking back, I equate that moment in my life with being shot up into the metaphorical pinball machine that is public education. Let me explain
Brian Schultz, author of Spectacular Things Happen Along the Way: Lessons from an Urban Classroom, ...
Recently, a colleague talked with me about a field observation she had conducted the day before, an ...
Original Minds paints a poignant and thought-provoking portrait of what it’s like to learn and think...
Ten years ago, shortly after being admitted to a graduate English program at a public college in New...
There is not enough art education in local elementary schools, and the curriculum, time constraints ...
I sometimes feel I’m stuck in an Alice-in-Wonderland world. Other times I feel that someone has crea...
This is a particularly challenging time for public education. There has been a coordinated, incessan...
“How are we going to shake them up?” This is the question Maxine asked me as she and I planned a sum...
This dissertation focuses on the school desk in order to awaken peripheral vision of classroom ecolo...
This issue of the Journal of Educational Controversy will mark our fifth anniversary. When I first f...
This paper explores students’ resistance to schooling and attempts to identify some of the factors c...
The central focus of my work over the past 30 years has been to struggle with two overarching and re...
Art Power! is a curriculum guide designed for educators of early adolescents who are interested in i...
In April, 2002, a three judge panel of the U.S. 9th Circuit Court handed down a ruling that overturn...
My research goal is to investigate how specific prompting of students would affect their involvement...
Brian Schultz, author of Spectacular Things Happen Along the Way: Lessons from an Urban Classroom, ...
Recently, a colleague talked with me about a field observation she had conducted the day before, an ...
Original Minds paints a poignant and thought-provoking portrait of what it’s like to learn and think...
Ten years ago, shortly after being admitted to a graduate English program at a public college in New...
There is not enough art education in local elementary schools, and the curriculum, time constraints ...
I sometimes feel I’m stuck in an Alice-in-Wonderland world. Other times I feel that someone has crea...
This is a particularly challenging time for public education. There has been a coordinated, incessan...
“How are we going to shake them up?” This is the question Maxine asked me as she and I planned a sum...
This dissertation focuses on the school desk in order to awaken peripheral vision of classroom ecolo...
This issue of the Journal of Educational Controversy will mark our fifth anniversary. When I first f...
This paper explores students’ resistance to schooling and attempts to identify some of the factors c...
The central focus of my work over the past 30 years has been to struggle with two overarching and re...
Art Power! is a curriculum guide designed for educators of early adolescents who are interested in i...
In April, 2002, a three judge panel of the U.S. 9th Circuit Court handed down a ruling that overturn...
My research goal is to investigate how specific prompting of students would affect their involvement...
Brian Schultz, author of Spectacular Things Happen Along the Way: Lessons from an Urban Classroom, ...
Recently, a colleague talked with me about a field observation she had conducted the day before, an ...
Original Minds paints a poignant and thought-provoking portrait of what it’s like to learn and think...