Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 376
Trim: 6 x 8¾
978-0-7425-3705-7 • Paperback • March 2005 • $62.00 • (£48.00)
978-0-7425-6867-9 • eBook • April 2005 • $58.50 • (£45.00)
Kenneth Tobin is Presidential Professor in The Graduate Center at The City University of New York. Rowhea Elmesky is associate professor at Washington University. Gale Seiler is associate professor at the University of Maryland, Baltimore.
Chapter 1 The Who, What, Where, and How of Our Urban Ethnographic Research
Chapter 2 Urban Science as a Culturally and Socially Adaptive Practice
Chapter 3 Painting the Landscape: Urban Schools and Urban Classrooms
Chapter 4 Organizational Mediation of Urban Science
Chapter 5 Playin on the Streets—Solidarity in the Classroom: Weak Cultural Boundaries and the Implications for Urban Science Education
Chapter 6 All My Life I Been Po': Oral Fluency as a Resource for Science Teaching and Learning
Chapter 7 Becoming an Urban Science Teacher: The First Three Years
Chapter 8 The Role of Cogenerative Dialogue in Learning to Teach and Transforming Learning Environments
Chapter 9 Learning Science and the Centrality of Student Participation
Chapter 10 Female Sexuality as Agency and Oppression in Urban Science Classrooms
Chapter 11 Meeting the Needs and Adapting to the Capital of a Queen Mother and an Ol' Head: Gender Equity in Urban High School Science
Chapter 12 Paperclips + Polymers —> Problems: Learning to Use Levels of Representation in a High School Chemistry Classroom
Chapter 13 An Autobiographical Approach to Becoming a Science Teacher in an Urban High School
Chapter 14 Beyond Either-Or: Reconsidering Resources in Terms of Structures
Chapter 15 My Cultural Awakening in the Classroom
Chapter 16 Social and Cultural Capital in Science Teaching: Relating Practice and Reflection
Chapter 17 Transforming the Future while Learning from the Past
Tobin (NSF Distinguished Teaching Scholar) and colleagues have created lively and personable accounts of how researchers, teachers, and students can work together to identify patterns and contradictions through cogenerative dialogue. This process producescollective agreements intended to improve the urban science-learning environment. These fresh insights offer hope and the notion that successful teaching revolves around positive emotional energy. Highly recommended....
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A colorful and detailed mural of ideas and perspectives for transforming urban science education.....
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This collection of 17 articles describes how science is integral to urban students, with contributions from academics, science teachers, and the students themselves.....
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• Winner, Choice Outstanding Academic Title 2006