As the title of this piece suggests, we theorize some of the similarities and differences between the judging and teaching profession. At first glance, the differences seem more apparent than any similarities. As we\u27ve discussed this text with colleagues and friends, overwhelmingly, the first question asked is: A judge and teacher, what do they have in common? However, we believe that the judge and teacher are uniquely positioned as fraternal partners across the labor/cultural landscape; we see more similarities than differences
This dissertation focuses on the school desk in order to awaken peripheral vision of classroom ecolo...
This paper explores students’ resistance to schooling and attempts to identify some of the factors c...
To me, Maxine Greene is a friend, a muse, and the flesh-and-blood embodiment of the moral teacher. M...
As the title of this piece suggests, we theorize some of the similarities and differences between th...
During 2005 and 2006, Gary Howard, the founder of the Reach Center for Multicultural Education and a...
Recently, a colleague talked with me about a field observation she had conducted the day before, an ...
The first part of my rejoinder is a contextual elaboration of Bowers’ ideas in “Rethinking Social Ju...
I realize that this title is both provocative and potentially very puzzling in the current environme...
Because it does not conform to the standard conception of a profession, motherhood might seem to hav...
I sometimes feel I’m stuck in an Alice-in-Wonderland world. Other times I feel that someone has crea...
As the culmination of my nonfiction seminar (ENGL 470C) with Professor Colin Rafferty, I chose to ex...
In 2002 the term “dispositions” entered the vocabulary of teacher education with a vengeance when th...
Elsewhere I have argued that neoliberal and neoconservative dominance of both public and private sph...
Cleaning your office can be a surprisingly cathartic experience. Diane Ravitch, once a darling in th...
In April, 2002, a three judge panel of the U.S. 9th Circuit Court handed down a ruling that overturn...
This dissertation focuses on the school desk in order to awaken peripheral vision of classroom ecolo...
This paper explores students’ resistance to schooling and attempts to identify some of the factors c...
To me, Maxine Greene is a friend, a muse, and the flesh-and-blood embodiment of the moral teacher. M...
As the title of this piece suggests, we theorize some of the similarities and differences between th...
During 2005 and 2006, Gary Howard, the founder of the Reach Center for Multicultural Education and a...
Recently, a colleague talked with me about a field observation she had conducted the day before, an ...
The first part of my rejoinder is a contextual elaboration of Bowers’ ideas in “Rethinking Social Ju...
I realize that this title is both provocative and potentially very puzzling in the current environme...
Because it does not conform to the standard conception of a profession, motherhood might seem to hav...
I sometimes feel I’m stuck in an Alice-in-Wonderland world. Other times I feel that someone has crea...
As the culmination of my nonfiction seminar (ENGL 470C) with Professor Colin Rafferty, I chose to ex...
In 2002 the term “dispositions” entered the vocabulary of teacher education with a vengeance when th...
Elsewhere I have argued that neoliberal and neoconservative dominance of both public and private sph...
Cleaning your office can be a surprisingly cathartic experience. Diane Ravitch, once a darling in th...
In April, 2002, a three judge panel of the U.S. 9th Circuit Court handed down a ruling that overturn...
This dissertation focuses on the school desk in order to awaken peripheral vision of classroom ecolo...
This paper explores students’ resistance to schooling and attempts to identify some of the factors c...
To me, Maxine Greene is a friend, a muse, and the flesh-and-blood embodiment of the moral teacher. M...