Listing 1 - 6 of 6 |
Sort by
|
Choose an application
The prime focus on the social processes of schooling within educational ethnography has tended to marginalise or eschew the importance of other 'informal' educational sites. Other social institutions, such as family, community, media and popular culture, work and prisons are salient arenas in which behaviours and lives are regulated. They all interrelate and are all implicated in the generation, management and development of social identities and the social and cultural reproduction of structures and relations. Individuals, though, are not merely shaped by these social institutions, their agency is evident in the way they creatively adapt and accommodate to the tensions and constraints of economic, educational and social policies. The maintenance of self in these situations requires identity work involving mediation, conflict, contestation and modes of resistance, which often contribute to a continual reconstruction of situations and contexts. This volume of "Studies in Educational Ethnography" focuses on identity and agency in a variety of social institutions in educational ethnography. The contributors explore these themes in a wide range of international contexts including: Belgium, Sweden, North America, South Africa and England. They demonstrate the capacity of educational ethnography to provide accounts of participants' perspectives and understandings to highlight the agency of educational subjects.
Educational anthropology --- Identity (Psychology) in adolescence --- Identity (Psychology) in children --- Social institutions --- Institutions, Social --- Social systems --- Sociology --- Social structure --- Child psychology --- Adolescent psychology --- Physical anthropology & ethnography. --- Education. --- Education --- General.
Choose an application
Since the 1992 Education Act inaugurated national arrangements for inspection, schools have operated within an 'inspection climate' which pervades every aspect of school life on a continual basis. The significance of OFSTED inspections cannot be overestimated. They are often the most challenging, searching, uncompromising and stressful events teacher have ever experienced. What effects do they have on teachers and their work, on their self and role, and on school policy and ethos? Drawing on case studies from contrasting primary schools over a three- year period, this book reveals how OFSTED i
Educational evaluation-- Great Britain. --- Elementary school teachers. --- Elementary school teaching. --- Evaluation. --- Great Britain. --- Theory & Practice of Education --- Education --- Social Sciences
Choose an application
Choose an application
Choose an application
What counts as ethnography and what counts as good ethnography are both highly contested. This volume brings together chapters presenting a diversity of views on some of the current issues and practices in ethnographic methodology. It does not try to present a single coherent view but, through its heterogeneity, illustrates the strengths and impact of the debate. The collection includes chapters on the ethnographic research process; the use of photographic diaries; the idea of toleration in the research process; and the personal aspects of research. It has chapters that question generalisation; perceive ethnography as a potential form of surveillance; analyse the notion of display in ethnography; critique the way culture is commonly theorised; and examine the possibilities of comparative ethnographic work. It also includes and exchange of views between Martyn Hammersley and Barbara Korth on partisan research.
Educational anthropology --- Ethnology --- Methodology. --- Campus cultures --- Culture and education --- Education and anthropology --- Anthropology --- Culture --- Education --- Philosophy --- Physical anthropology & ethnography. --- Methodology --- Research.
Choose an application
Listing 1 - 6 of 6 |
Sort by
|