Christian Privilege in U.S. Education

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A01=Avner Segall
A01=Kevin J. Burke
accountability in education
American Education
Anchor Standards
Apollonian Child
Author_Avner Segall
Author_Kevin J. Burke
Avner Segall
Career Readiness Anchor Standards
Category=JNB
Category=JNDG
Category=JNF
CCSS
Christian Privilege
Christianity
Common Language
Common Schools Movement
Complete Feedback Loop
critical curriculum theory
curriculum inquiry
curriculum studies
curriculum theory
educational discourse critique
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Follow
GMRT
God's Teaching
God’s Teaching
hidden Christianity in public schools
Holds
Judeo-Christian ethos
Kevin J. Burke
Mystical Sociology
NCLB
Public School Classrooms
religion and education
religious influence pedagogy
Revelatory Moments
secular public education
secular schooling analysis
SIOP
STAAR
Standards Movement
Teachable Moment
Teacher Candidates
teacher education
teacher preparation research
Vice Versa
Wo
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138649941
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 08 Dec 2016
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Using critical curriculum theory as its lens, this book explores the relationship between religion—specifically, Christianity and the Judeo-Christian ethos underlying it—and secular public education in the United States. Despite various 20th-century court decisions separating religion and education, the authors challenge that religion is in fact absent from public education, suggesting instead that it is in fact very much embedded in current public educational practices and discourses and in a variety of assumptions and perspectives underlying understandings of teaching, learning, and teacher preparation. The book reframes the discussion about religion and schooling, arguing that it remains in the language and metaphors of education, in the practices and routines of schooling, in conceptions of the "’child" and the "teacher" (and what happens between them in the spaces we call "learning," the "classroom," and "curriculum") as well as in assumptions about the role of schools emanating from such conceptions and in the current movement toward accountability, standardization, and testing. Christian Privilege in U.S. Education examines not whether Christianity has a place in public education but, rather, the very ways in which it is pervasive in a legally secular system of education even when religion is not a topic taught in school.

Kevin J. Burke is Assistant Professor of English Education, University of Georgia, USA.

Avner Segall is Professor of Teacher Education, Department of Teacher Education, Michigan State University, USA.

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