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E-grāmata: STEM and the Social Good: Forwarding Political and Ethical Perspectives in the Learning Sciences

  • Formāts: 160 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 17-Dec-2020
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781000198287
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  • Formāts: 160 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 17-Dec-2020
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781000198287

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This compilation of empirical studies interrogates the global high-speed train of STEM education, particularly as a promise of social, economic, and political enfranchisement for marginalized communities.



This compilation of empirical studies interrogates the global high-speed train of STEM education, particularly as a promise of social, economic, and political enfranchisement for marginalized communities.

In this book, scholars of race, education, and learning offer a range of analyses from which to consider the "who", "what", and "toward ends" of STEM education. Together with scholarly commentaries, the studies frame STEM learning as a personal and political enterprise worthy of closer examination in the lives of children, the work of adults, and the making of nations. Thus, the studies vary in scope and scale, but coalesce in surfacing the ideologies and values underlying the rapid ingestion of STEM in schools and communities as a "social good for all". Readers will journey through a Latinx student’s reflections on social justice mathematics, African American primary school students studying water and justice, Indigenous families engaged in storytelling with robotics, college STEM mentors’ work with youth, an online portal created for youth in Singapore to envision a STEM-infused future; and finally, frameworks for teaching and research that engage marginalized children’s histories, cultural practices and sensemaking. The socio-political grounding and visioning of these works makes this a must-read for researchers, teachers, teacher educators and policy makers in STEM.

The chapters in this book were originally published in a special issue of the journal, Cognition and Instruction.

Introduction: Another Step Forward: Engaging the Political in Learning

Tesha Sengupta-Irving and Maxine McKinney de Royston

1. MySkillsFuture for Students: Stem Learning and the Design of Neoliberal
Citizenship in Singapore

Roberto Santiago de Roock and Mark Baildon

2. Storywork in STEM-Art: Making, Materiality and Robotics within Everyday
Acts of Indigenous Presence and Resurgence

Carrie Tzou, Meixi, Enrique Suįrez, Philip Bell, Don LaBonte, Elizabeth
Starks & Megan Bang

3. Learning in Community for STEM Undergraduates: Connecting a Learning
Sciences and a Learning Humanities Approach in Higher Education

Leslie Rupert Herrenkohl, Jiyoung Lee, Fan Kong, Susie Nakamura, Kimia Imani,
Kari Nasu, Ansel Hartman, Benjamin Pennant, Elisa Tran, Evert Wang, Noushyar
Panahpour Eslami, Daniel Whittlesey, David Whittlesey, Tri Minh Hyunh, Allen
Jung, Chris Batalon, Adam Bell and Katie Headrick Taylor

4. Integrating Power to Advance the Study of Connective and Productive
Disciplinary Engagement in Mathematics and Science

Priyanka Agarwal and Tesha Sengupta-Irving

5. Troubling Troubled Waters in Elementary Science Education: Politics,
Ethics and Black Childrens Conceptions of Water [ Justice] in the Era of
Flint

Natalie R. Davis and Janelle Schaeffer

6. Looking at My (Real) World through Mathematics: Memories and Imaginaries
of Math and Science Learning

Patricia M. Buenrostro and Josh Radinsky

7. The Restorying of STEM Learning through the Lens of Multiples

Jrčne Rahm

8. Read Me Last: Constructing a Scholarly Catchment Through a Black Feminist
Reading

Maisie L. Gholson
Tesha Sengupta-Irving is Assistant Professor of the Learning Sciences in the Graduate School of Education at the University of California, Berkeley, USA. Her research explores the sociocultural and political dimensions of teaching and learning that resist the stratifying power of mathematics as a project of race, gender, and class in schools.

Maxine McKinney de Royston is Assistant Professor in the Department of Curriculum & Instruction at the University of WisconsinMadison, USA. Her research examines the multidimensional, relational, and politicized nature of teaching and learning, namely how schools and mathematics and science classrooms operate as racialized learning spaces.