Critical Ethnography and Education

Phil Francis Carspecken|Geoffrey Walford
Emerald
Emerald

This book can be opened with

Glassboxx eBooks and audiobooks can be opened on phones, tablets, iOS and Android devices

Hardback
9780762307975
16 August 2001
£112.99
  • Description
  • Contents
Volume five of this expanding series of books draws together a collection of papers based on a particular form of critical ethnography developed by Phil Francis Carspecken and his colleagues at the University of Houston. Each chapter is based on a unique field project conducted in the Houston area which was planned and conducted by its particular author, but each chapter shares and exemplifies a common methodological theory. The Houston version of critical ethnography attempts to deal with some challenges from certain feminist and postmodern writers about the validity of qualitative research, and the authors argue that clear methods and standards exist for conducting qualitative studies such that well supported findings may be distinguished from highly questionable ones. Following an initial chapter by Carspecken which outlines the theory and methodology adopted, are seven case studies which cover such topics as multicultural literature, the supervision of teachers in training, school restructuring, charter schools, and race and standardized testing.

EDITORIAL BOARD. Preface. Critical ethnographies from Houston: Distinctive features and directions. Between the lines: Constructing parallel levels of meaning and identity in discussions about multicultural literature. The class clown and negotiated epistemology in a classroom. Instructional supervision: Collaborative power, super power, or visionary power?. A critical ethnography of the professional community in a restructured school: Recognizing diverse views. Reforming educational practice against the boundaries of (re)iteration: A critical ethnography of the hidden curriculum of a constructivist charter school. Testing white culture: African American students and standardized testing. Negotiating meaning and power: Middle school students interpret literature and selves through discussion and recall. Notes on Contributors.