Promoting Equity and Justice Through Pedagogical Partnership

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A01=Alise de Bie
A01=Alison Cook-Sather
A01=Elizabeth Marquis
A01=Leslie Luqueno
addressing systemic bias in academia
Affective Harms
Affective Violences
anti-racist teaching strategies
Author_Alise de Bie
Author_Alison Cook-Sather
Author_Elizabeth Marquis
Author_Leslie Luqueno
Bryn Mawr
Category=JNMT
critical race theory
curriculum co-creation
De Bie
Epistemic Harm
Epistemic Labor
Epistemic Violence
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Equitable Teaching Practices
Equity
Faculty Development
Faculty Partners
Fudge Schormans
Haverford College
higher education pedagogy
Inclusion
Learning Improvement
Ontological Justice
Ontological Violence
Partnership Literature
Partnership Work
Partnership's Facilitation
Pedagogical partnership
Pedagogical Partnership Initiatives
Pedagogical Partnership Program
Postsecondary Education
qualitative educational research
Selective Liberal Arts Colleges
SoTL
Student Faculty Partnership
Student Learning
Student Partner
Student Success
student voice empowerment
Teaching and Learning
Undergraduate Students

Product details

  • ISBN 9781642672091
  • Weight: 300g
  • Dimensions: 158 x 235mm
  • Publication Date: 24 Jun 2021
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Faculty and staff in higher education are looking for ways to address the deep inequity and systemic racism that pervade our colleges and universities. Pedagogical partnership can be a powerful tool to enhance equity, inclusion, and justice in our classrooms and curricula. These partnerships create opportunities for students from underrepresented and equity-seeking groups to collaborate with faculty and staff to revise and reinvent pedagogies, assessments, and course designs, positioning equity and justice as core educational aims. When students have a seat at the table, previously unheard voices are amplified, and diversity and difference introduce essential perspectives that are too often overlooked.In particular, the book contributes to the literature on pedagogical partnership and equity in education by integrating theory, synthesizing research, and providing concrete examples of the ways partnership can contribute to more equitable educational systems. At the same time, the authors acknowledge that partnership can only realize its full potential to redress harms and promote equity and justice when thoughtfully enacted. This book is a resource that will inspire and challenge a wide variety of higher education faculty and staff and contribute to advancing both practice and research on the potential of student-faculty pedagogical partnerships. Presenting a conceptual framework for understanding the various epistemological, affective, and ontological harms that face students from equity-seeking groups in postsecondary education, Promoting Equity and Justice Through Pedagogical Partnership applies this conceptual framework to current literature in partnerships, highlighting the promise of partnership as the way to redress these harms. The authors ground both the conceptual framework and the literature review by offering two case studies of pedagogical partnership in practice. They then explore the complexities raised by their framework, including the conditions under which partnerships themselves may risk reproducing epistemic, affective, or ontological harms. Applying the framework in this way allows them to propose strategies that make it more likely for these mediations to be successful. Finally, the authors focus on the future of pedagogical partnership and share their perspectives on new directions for inquiry and practice. After summarizing the overarching themes developed throughout the book, the authors leave the reader with a set of questions and recommendations for further inquiry and discussion.

A Series on Engaged Learning and Teaching Book. Visit the books’ companion website, hosted by the Center for Engaged Learning, for book resources.

Alise de Bie is a Postdoctoral Research Fellow in the Paul R. MacPherson Institute for Leadership, Innovation, and Excellence in Teaching at McMaster University. Working across disciplines, Alise’s teaching and research has primarily contributed to Mad(ness) Studies and Critical Disability Studies. Their work can be found in journals such as Disability & Society, Teaching in Higher Education, Social Work Education, Academic Psychiatry, and Medical Humanities. Elizabeth Marquis is an associate professor in the Arts and Science program and the School of the Arts at McMaster University. Beth’s teaching and learning research focuses primarily on student-faculty partnership, the intersections between teaching and learning and questions of equity and justice, and film and media texts as public pedagogy. She has published widely on these and other topics (often in partnership with students), and her work can be found in journals such as Pedagogy, Culture, and Society, Teaching in Higher Education, and Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education. From 2015–2020, Beth served as associate director (Research) at McMaster’s Paul R. MacPherson Institute for Leadership, Innovation, and Excellence in Teaching, where she codeveloped and oversaw McMaster’s Student Partners Program (SPP), and served as a founding coeditor of the International Journal for Students as Partners. Alison Cook-Sather is Mary Katharine Woodworth Professor of Education at Bryn Mawr College and director of the Teaching and Learning Institute at Bryn Mawr and Haverford Colleges. Alison has developed internationally recognized programs that position students as pedagogical consultants to prospective secondary teachers and to practicing college faculty members. She is founding editor of Teaching and Learning Together in Higher Education and founding coeditor of International Journal for Students as Partners. Leslie Patricia Luqueño is a doctoral student at Stanford University’