This book invites readers to engage with the rich and complex debates of contemporary English education, outlining new possibilities to revive the teaching of English. Bringing together diverse voices and insights from educators in English across the primary, secondary, further and higher education phases, the book offers reflections and critical engagement with the lived experiences of English teachers and pupils in contemporary educational spaces. Each chapter includes example vignettes from classrooms which tell something of the story of English teaching today. The book considers how…mehr
This book invites readers to engage with the rich and complex debates of contemporary English education, outlining new possibilities to revive the teaching of English. Bringing together diverse voices and insights from educators in English across the primary, secondary, further and higher education phases, the book offers reflections and critical engagement with the lived experiences of English teachers and pupils in contemporary educational spaces. Each chapter includes example vignettes from classrooms which tell something of the story of English teaching today. The book considers how politics and policy have worked to close the opportunities of the English classroom for self-expression and critical engagement with the world - a murder. The authors then offer an exploration of the opportunities for a re-imagining of English - the murmurs of teachers and pupils that resist such closures. The chapters explore new thinking, new practices and new possibilities for English classrooms as inclusive, emancipatory, critical and creative spaces. Offering a thoughtful and hopeful dialogue from practising English teacher-researchers, the book will be essential reading for researchers and students of English language and literature education, as well as trainee teachers of English.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Dr Pete Bennett is a Senior Lecturer in Post Compulsory Education at the University of Wolverhampton, UK. Dr Louise Lambert is an Associate Professor in the School of Education and Social work at Birmingham City University, UK. Dr Rob Smith is a Professor of Education at Birmingham City University, UK.
Inhaltsangabe
Introduction: Rethinking and Reviving Subject English: The Murder and the Murmur. Part 1. The murder: Politics, policy and practice. 1. English is shit! A post-modern murder mystery. Kirstie Harrington. 2. Where has oracy gone? The curious case of the erosion of speaking and listening in GCSE English. Nic Worgan & Georgina Garbett. 3. Is the English curriculum really suitable for all? Salya Akhtar. 4. Rethinking, reimagining English in the post-16 sector: COVID-19 and the future of English. Joanne Bowser-Angermann & Elizabeth Draper. 5. Against the clock: 'Time for Literacy Hour, children' - A critique of English policy in primary schools. Louise Wheatcroft. 6. "A little bit of Jekyll, a little Mr. Hyde": Secondary English teachers speak of the tensions between their perception of English teaching and the systems they are required to serve. Debbie Haynes. Part 2. Notes from the struggle: Engagement and re-openings. 7. Zainab. Heather James. 8. 'Smallness, narrowness and servility': Resisting English at university over 30 years. Michael Jopling and Harvey Jopling. 9. Home education and English: The ticking time bomb of future need? Mel Carter. 10. Making creative spaces - constraints and aspirations: The English curriculum From Key Stage One to Key Stage Three. Steph Perks, Jennifer Wells and Victoria Wright. 11. Old books for hungry children: Negotiating definitions of cultural capital to support 'disadvantaged' children in primary school reading. Shaun Allen-Dooley. 12. In your own write; for English wherever I may find her: De-territorialising writing. Pete Bennett and Howard Scott. Part 3. The murmur: Optimism, re-imaginings and ways to rethink English. 13. The tentative: A modest proposal for a great leap forward. Shaun Passey . 14. Possibilities for teaching English literature in posthuman times. Louise Lambert. 15. Dissenting voices: Finding agency, authenticity and autonomy in the 'luxuriant now'. Chris Waugh. 16. English and the Lefebvrian 'moment'. Rob Smith. 17. Interrogating the listening practices of Mr Oxford Don: teacher education, culturally sustaining pedagogies and raciolinguistic ideologies. Ian Cushing. Afterword: Resources of Hope. Pete Bennett, Louise Lambert and Rob Smith
Introduction: Rethinking and Reviving Subject English: The Murder and the Murmur. Part 1. The murder: Politics, policy and practice. 1. English is shit! A post-modern murder mystery. Kirstie Harrington. 2. Where has oracy gone? The curious case of the erosion of speaking and listening in GCSE English. Nic Worgan & Georgina Garbett. 3. Is the English curriculum really suitable for all? Salya Akhtar. 4. Rethinking, reimagining English in the post-16 sector: COVID-19 and the future of English. Joanne Bowser-Angermann & Elizabeth Draper. 5. Against the clock: 'Time for Literacy Hour, children' - A critique of English policy in primary schools. Louise Wheatcroft. 6. "A little bit of Jekyll, a little Mr. Hyde": Secondary English teachers speak of the tensions between their perception of English teaching and the systems they are required to serve. Debbie Haynes. Part 2. Notes from the struggle: Engagement and re-openings. 7. Zainab. Heather James. 8. 'Smallness, narrowness and servility': Resisting English at university over 30 years. Michael Jopling and Harvey Jopling. 9. Home education and English: The ticking time bomb of future need? Mel Carter. 10. Making creative spaces - constraints and aspirations: The English curriculum From Key Stage One to Key Stage Three. Steph Perks, Jennifer Wells and Victoria Wright. 11. Old books for hungry children: Negotiating definitions of cultural capital to support 'disadvantaged' children in primary school reading. Shaun Allen-Dooley. 12. In your own write; for English wherever I may find her: De-territorialising writing. Pete Bennett and Howard Scott. Part 3. The murmur: Optimism, re-imaginings and ways to rethink English. 13. The tentative: A modest proposal for a great leap forward. Shaun Passey . 14. Possibilities for teaching English literature in posthuman times. Louise Lambert. 15. Dissenting voices: Finding agency, authenticity and autonomy in the 'luxuriant now'. Chris Waugh. 16. English and the Lefebvrian 'moment'. Rob Smith. 17. Interrogating the listening practices of Mr Oxford Don: teacher education, culturally sustaining pedagogies and raciolinguistic ideologies. Ian Cushing. Afterword: Resources of Hope. Pete Bennett, Louise Lambert and Rob Smith
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