Women Curriculum Theorists

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A01=David Scott
A01=Sandra Leaton Gray
Alpha Kappa Alpha
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care ethics
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Central Human Functional Capabilities
Clitoral Glans
Clitoral Hood
Conditioning Structure
Curriculum theorist
Curriculum theory
Curriculum thinker
Decolonisation
Decolonization
Discursive Configuration
Discursive Object
Dorothea Beale
Early Childhood Education
educational philosophy
Embodiment
Epistemic Decolonisation
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Female scholars
Female scholarship
feminist curriculum development
feminist pedagogy
Feminist tradition
Follow
gender studies
Good Life
Inclusion
Indigeneity
indigenous education
Intersex Persons
Jane Roland Martin
Julia Kristeva
Knowledge
Liberal Feminism
Lucy Diggs Slowe
Malting House School
Maria Montessori
Marie Battiste
Mary Warnock
Maxine Greene
Montessori Classroom
Montessori Method
Montessori Schools
Nel Noddings
Power
Reflective Practice
Secretary Of State
social justice theory
St Mary The Virgin
Subjectivity
Susan Haack
Susan Isaacs
Trousers
Valerie Walkerdine
Women Curriculum
Women curriculum theorists
Women curriculum thinkers
Women scholars
Women's Teacher Training Colleges

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032258973
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 21 Apr 2023
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Most published bodies of work relating to curriculum theory focus exclusively, or almost exclusively, on the contributions of men. This is not representative of influences on educational practices as a whole, and it is certainly not representative of educational theory generally, as women have played a significant role in framing the theory and practice of education in the past. Their contribution is at least equal to that of men, even though it may not immediately appear as visible on library shelves or lecture lists. This book addresses this egregious deficit by asking readers to engage in an intellectual conversation about the nature of women’s curriculum theory, as well as its impact on society and thought in general. It does this by examining the work of twelve women curriculum theorists: Maxine Greene, Susan Haack, Julia Kristeva, Martha Nussbaum, Nel Noddings, Jane Roland Martin, Marie Battiste, Dorothea Beale, Susan Isaacs, Maria Montessori, Mary Warnock and Lucy Diggs Slowe.

The book is not an encyclopaedia, nor is it a history book. It aims to bring to the reader’s attention, through a semantic rendition of the world, those seminal relationships that exist between the three meta-concepts that are addressed in the work, feminism, learning and curriculum. It will appeal to scholars and researchers with interests in curriculum, and the philosophy and sociology of education.

Sandra Leaton Gray is an Associate Professor of Education at the UCL Institute of Education, UK, and Senior Member, Wolfson College, Cambridge University.

David Scott is an Emeritus Professor of Curriculum, Pedagogy and Assessment at the UCL Institute of Education, UK.

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