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-- Morna McDermott McNulty, Professor, Towson University
"From beginning to end, Tom engages us with the curriculum fragments of his own life, drawing us into thinking more deeply about curriculum as it is embedded in lived experience. His commitment to remembering, exploring, and contemplating from the inside out, allows us to see currere at work as it surfaces an ever-evolving curriculum - lived and emergent - that supports deep learning and transformative possibilities for the self and its co-constitutive relations with others and the world."
- Denise Taliaferro Baszile, Dean, College of Education, Wayne State University
"Poetter's "idea from the beginning has been to work my way through aspects of life experience that have informed my educational journey," and then "to theorize and speculate about their meaning and worth through the lens of seven different, though overlapping life processes," that term a concept borrowed from Louise Berman's 1968 New Priorities in the Curriculum. His chapters are titled after seven processes, processes that those curriculum fragments render concrete, even catalytic. Feet firmly on the ground, Poetter invites us to walk alongside him as he reactivates the past, and that sense of motion - biographic movement - pervades the "feel of the book," a phrase he invokes in his discussion of Berman's book."
- from the Foreword by William F. Pinar, Tetsuo Aoki Professor in Curriculum Studies, The University of British Columbia
"Leaning into more than a half-century of curriculum reconceptualization scholarship, Tom Poetter's refreshing book, Curriculum Fragments, is a proposal for practicing curriculum inquiry through and participating in life processes. The power of Poetter's invitation rests on his brilliant, provocative weaving of personal stories-what he calls curriculum fragments-that point to and point out the transformative bits that make up his life, and in turn, his educational journey. Those interested in engaging in self-study to improve not only their own meaning making but also the educational experiences of others, need to read this book."
-- Brian D. Schultz, Professor, Miami University