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E-grāmata: Rethinking Social Studies

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This book examines the contradictions in social studies, advocating for a new approach that empowers students to understand and act on social issues. It challenges conventional practices, emphasizing critical pedagogy, social justice, and the importance of student agency in shaping their own history and future.



Like the schools in which it is taught, social studies is full of alluring contradictions. It harbors possibilities for inquiry and social criticism, liberation and emancipation. Social studies could be a site that enables young people to analyze and understand social issues in a holistic way – finding and tracing relations and interconnections both present and past in an effort to build meaningful understandings of a problem, its context and history; to envision a future where specific social problems are resolved; and take action to bring that vision in to existence. Social studies could be a place where students learn to speak for themselves in order to achieve, or at least strive toward an equal degree of participation and better future. Social studies could be like this, but it is not.

Rethinking Social Studies examines why social studies has been and continues to be profoundly conversing in nature, the engine room of illusion factories whose primary aim is reproduction of the existing social order, where the ruling ideas exist to be memorized, regurgitated, internalized and lived by. Rethinking social studies as a site where students can develop personally meaningful understandings of the world and recognize they have agency to act on the world, and make change, rests on the premises that social studies should not show life to students, but bringing them to life and that the aim of social studies is getting students to speak for themselves, to understand people make their own history even if they make it in already existing circumstances. These principles are the foundation for a new social studies, one that is not driven by standardized curriculum or examinations, but by the perceived needs, interests, desires of students, communities of shared interest, and ourselves as educators.

Rethinking Social Studies challenges readers to reconsider conventional thought and practices that sustain the status quo in classrooms, schools, and society by critically engaging with questions and issues such as: neutrality in the classroom; how movement conservatism shapes the social studies curriculum; how corporate-driven education affects schools, teachers, and curriculum; ways in which teachers can creatively disrupt everyday life in the social studies classroom; going beyond language and inclusive content in social justice oriented teaching; making critical pedagogy relevant to everyday life and classroom practice; the invisibility of class in the social studies curriculum and how to make it a central organizing concept; class war, class consciousness and social studies in the age of empire; what are your ideals as a social studies education and how do you keep them and still teach ; and what it means to be a critical social studies educator beyond the classroom.

Foreword xiii
Peter McLaren
Preface xxi
Acknowledgments xxvii
Permissions xxxi
PART I REDRAWING THE LINES
1 Redrawing the Lines: The Case Against Traditional Social Studies Instruction
3(20)
Education as Indoctrination?
5(2)
Traditional Social Studies Instruction: Accepting the Lines as Drawn
7(3)
A View From the Sidelines: Learners and Citizens as Spectators
10(1)
Learners as Spectators
10(4)
Citizens as Spectators
14(4)
Redrawing the Lines
18(5)
2 If Social Studies Is Wrong) I Don't Want to Be Right (with Perry Marker)
23(12)
Social Studies: The Wayward Field
24(1)
Social Studies and Movement Conservatism
25(2)
Attack on Pluralism Within Social Studies
27(8)
3 Insurrectionist Pedagogies and the Pursuit of Dangerous Citizenship (with Kevin D. Vinson)
35(38)
Neoliberal Education Reform in the United States and Canada
35(5)
Mack the Turtle, Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, and Other Threats to Students in BC Schools
40(3)
Education for Dangerous Citizenship
43(1)
Social Control and Citizenship Education
44(1)
Making Dangerous Citizens?
45(2)
Social Control and the Rewriting of History in Texas (and Florida)
47(2)
Dangerous Citizenship
49(2)
Pedagogical Imaginaries for Insurgent Pedagogies (or Creative Disruption of Everyday Life in the Classroom)
51(1)
Tactics of Everyday Life (La Perruque)
52(3)
Derive and Detournement
55(1)
Parrhesia
55(3)
Epistemological Sabatoge
58(1)
The Propaganda Model
59(2)
The Alienation Effect
61(1)
The Ethical Spectacle
62(1)
Temporary Autonomous Zones
62(11)
PART II SOCIAL EDUCATION AND CRITICAL KNOWLEDGE FOR EVERYDAY LIFE
4 Social Studies Requires a Revolution of Everyday Life
73(10)
What Is Social Justice?
74(1)
Images and Everyday Life
74(1)
The Reproduction of Everyday Life
75(4)
The Perspective of Power and Social Justice
79(1)
Social Justice Requires a Revolution of Everyday Life
80(3)
5 Broadening the Circle of Critical Pedagogy
83(14)
Broadening the Circle Philosophically
84(1)
Freire and Dewey
84(2)
Dialectics and Critical Pedagogy
86(2)
Priestcraft and Critical Pedagogy
88(1)
Individuals, Institutions, Social Change, and Critical Pedagogy
89(4)
Future of Critical Pedagogy
93(4)
6 Why Teaching Class Matters (with Greg Queen)
97(26)
Invisibility of Class in Social Studies
97(3)
What Is Class? Why It Matters
100(4)
Obstacles to Teaching Class
104(2)
Class as a Central Concept in the Curriculum
106(3)
Teaching About Capitalism
109(1)
Teaching About Racism
110(1)
Teaching About Globalization
111(1)
Teaching About Imperialist War
112(1)
A Spiral Curriculum
113(1)
Being Political in the Classroom
114(9)
7 Education for Class Consciousness (with Rich Gibson)
123(28)
Making Connections: Elections of 2008, 2010, and 2012
124(2)
Making Connections: U.S. Foreign Policy and the Collapsed Economy
126(2)
"A Long Tunnel of Blood and Darkness"
128(1)
Economic Meltdown Sparks Global Unrest
129(2)
United States Prepares for Class War
131(2)
Education Agenda as a War Agenda
133(7)
Connecting Reason, Passion, Ethics, Organization, and Action
140(11)
8 How Do I Keep My Ideals and Still Teach? (with Rich Gibson, Greg Queen, and Kevin D. Vinson)
151(22)
Adapt, Strategically Comply, or Redefine?
152(2)
"I Participate, You Participate, We Participate, They Profit"
154(1)
Origins of the Rouge Forum
155(1)
The Arrest and Trial of Sam Diener
156(1)
CUFA, Proposition 187, and the Boycott of California
157(3)
Centripetal Position of Schools in North American Society
160(2)
Regulating Education and the Economy
162(3)
Reaching Out: Building Connections and Grassroots Organizing
165(1)
Justice Demands Organization
165(2)
Grassroots Organizing
167(1)
Interactive and Collaborative Conferences
167(1)
Working Within Other Professional Organizations
167(1)
Writing and Scholarship
168(1)
Community Alliances
168(5)
9 Teaching for Change: Social Education and Critical Knowledge for Everyday Life
173(10)
My Pedagogical Creed
175(1)
What Education Should Be For
175(1)
What the School Should Strive For
175(2)
The Subject Matter of Education
177(1)
The Nature of Method
177(1)
The School and Social Progress
178(1)
Now It's Your Turn
179(4)
PART III BEYOND THE CLASSROOM
10 Social Studies as Public Pedagogy: Engaging Social Issues in the Media
183(18)
The Corporate Press, Public Schools, and Democracy
184(1)
Corporatization of the News
185(2)
Separating the Institution and the Individuals
187(2)
The Press and Movement Conservatism
189(2)
Stepping Into the Fray: Why Do I Bother?
191(1)
The Meaning of Test Scores: An Example
192(2)
So You Want to Be a Pundit?
194(7)
11 A Sense of Where You Are: An Intellectual Self-Portrait
201(18)
"Have Ye Received the Holy Ghost Since Ye Believed?"
201(3)
"Maggie's Farm"
204(3)
"Fearing Not That I'd Become My Enemy in the Instant That I Preach"
207(4)
"Using Ideas as My Maps/We'll Meet on the Edges, Soon"
211(2)
"Ah, I Was So Much Older Then, I'm Younger Than That Now"
213(6)
12 Critical Education and Insurgent Pedagogies: An Interview With E. Wayne Ross
219(16)
About the Author 235