Understanding Sociological Theory for Educational Practices

Understanding Sociological Theory for Educational Practices

Understanding Sociological Theory for Educational Practices

Understanding Sociological Theory for Educational Practices

Paperback(3rd ed.)

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Overview

A sound knowledge of sociological theory allows educators to think critically about the complexities of education for all children, young people, their families and communities. Understanding Sociological Theory for Educational Practices introduces the diversity of contemporary learning environments to readers. It uses a sociological lens to analyse relevant theoretical concepts, encouraging all educators to consider the impact of the learning environment they cultivate on their students. This third edition has been thoroughly updated, with new chapters covering a range of contemporary issues in education. The chapters point to the need to acknowledge Indigenous knowledges in educational settings; to include gender and sexuality diversity; and to address harassment, disadvantage, inequity and exclusion experienced by vulnerable students and their communities. Other areas related to home language support and multilingual education; schooling for refugee background students; and migrant family connections in postcolonial settings are also explored.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781009354820
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Publication date: 10/31/2024
Edition description: 3rd ed.
Pages: 290
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 1.25(h) x 9.00(d)

About the Author

Tania Ferfolja is Associate Professor in social and cultural diversity in the School of Education and Centre for Educational Research at Western Sydney University, Australia. Tania has been teaching pre-service teachers for over twenty years. She is passionate about equity and the critical need to create change for a sustainable and regenerative future. Her teaching focusses on issues of equity, discrimination, social justice, and social and cultural inclusion. She is the recipient of numerous teaching awards for this work. Tania's research focusses on gender and sexuality diverse subjectivities in education. She is well-published in the field; her most recent book is titled, Gender and Sexuality Diversity in a Culture of Limitation: Student and Teacher Experiences in Schools (Ferfolja & Ullman, 2020, Routledge). She is currently co-authoring another book based on a large Australian research study. The book is titled Understanding Parents' Perceptions of Gender and Sexuality Diversity in the Classroom. Allied. Opposed. Unsure (Ferfolja & Ullman, forthcoming, Routledge). This research has also produced a playscript, film and professional learning materials for educators. See www.westernsydney.edu.au/gsds.

Criss Jones Díaz is a Senior Lecturer in diversity studies and languages education in the School of Education at Western Sydney University and a researcher in the Centre for Educational Research. She collaborates with educators providing professional development on diversity and difference, multilingualism, early literacies and languages learning in childhood. Her research and publications are in critical and cultural studies focussing on languages, literacies and identity negotiation in contexts of diversity and difference. She has authored and co-authored numerous journal articles, book chapters and books pertaining to her area of expertise. With national and international colleagues, she is currently working on research examining home/community language retention and loss in young children from birth to five years who are attending early childhood settings in New South Wales, Australia.

Jacqueline Ullman is Associate Professor in the School of Education at Western Sydney University, where she teaches pre-service secondary teachers in the areas of sociology of education, educational psychology and research methods. Her research explores the schooling and workplace experiences of gender and sexuality diverse young people, including relevant investigations of policy and policy 'translation'. Jacqueline's Free2Be ...Yet? project (2021), her second Australian national survey of gender and sexuality diverse high school students, investigated the relationship between students' reported school climate and school wellbeing. Jacqueline's federally funded research has culminated in numerous publicly available outputs for educators, including books, journal articles, and a package of research-informed professional development resources for teachers titled, What Parents Want: Talking about Gender and Sexuality Diversity in School and available on www.westernsydney.edu.au/gsds.

Table of Contents

Foreword Emily M. Gray; Part I. Foundations: 1. The unseen half: theories for educational practices Tania Ferfolja, Criss Jones Díaz and Jacqueline Ullman; 2. A teacher's toolkit: foregrounding the role of theory in grappling with cultural complexity in schooling Megan Watkins; 3. Towards equity: privileging indigenous knowledges in education research Ren Perkins, Amy Thomson and Marnee Shay; 4. Understanding childhood in diverse socio-cultural contexts Kerry H. Robinson; Part II. Putting Theory to Work in Educational Research: 5. Gender and sexuality diversity in education Tania Ferfolja; 6. 'The class continued like it never happened': high school teachers in/action in response to homophobia and transphobic harassment Jacqueline Ullman; 7. Reframing disadvantage, inequity and exclusion for vulnerable educational communities Susanne Gannon and Christine Woodrow; 8. Examining monolingual and monocultural orientations in educational practice Jacqueline D'warte; 9. Educators' and families' perspectives of home language support and early multilingual education Criss Jones Díaz; 10. Schooling for refugee-background students in Australia Loshini Naidoo; 11. Reinforcing and resisting Islamophobia through the pedagogical practices of teachers: a critical theory approach Zainab Mourad; 12. Transnational migrant families' connection to 'people, places and things' in a postcolonial Aotearoa New Zealand Angel Chan and Jenny Ritchie; 13. Final ruminations on the 'unseen half' Jacqueline Ullman, Criss Jones Díaz and Tania Ferfolja.
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