1st Edition

Gender in Learning and Teaching Feminist Dialogues Across International Boundaries

Edited By Carol Taylor, Chantal Amade-Escot, Andrea Abbas Copyright 2019
    206 Pages
    by Routledge

    206 Pages
    by Routledge

    Gender in Learning and Teaching brings together leading gender and feminist scholars to provide a unique collection of international research into learning and teaching. Through dialogues across national traditions and boundaries, the authors provide new insights into the relations between feminist scholarship of pedagogy, gender and didactics, and offer in-depth accounts that critically investigate how gender relations are enacted, contested and analysed at the level of the classroom, the curriculum, and the institution.



    Drawing on original research, the chapters explore gender dynamics in relation to student-teacher interactions, gendered classroom practices, curriculum content and knowledge formation in different subjects. The book includes accounts of innovative approaches to curriculum development to address gender inequality. It includes new theoretical frameworks and methodological approaches which provide fresh insights into gendered practices including intersectionality, new material feminism, epistemic gender positioning and cultural anthropology. The chapters span all education phases from early years to higher education.



    This book makes a compelling case for the continuing relevance of feminist pedagogy and the urgent need for strategies to address gender inequalities in the classroom and beyond. It will be of great interest to academics and postgraduate students in the fields of theory, philosophy and feminist politics of learning and teaching; education and didactics; feminism and pedagogy; sociology and the arts.

    Preface



    Andrea Abbas, Carol A. Taylor and Chantal Amade-Escot





    Acknowledgements





    Chapter 1



    Introduction: Debates Across Anglophone and European Didactic Traditions



    Andrea Abbas, Carol A. Taylor and Chantal Amade-Escot





    Chapter 2



    The Gendered History of Bildung as Concept and Practice: A Speculative Feminist Analysis



    Carol A. Taylor



    Paired Dialogue: Notes on the Potential of a Feminist Bildung: A French Perspective



    Joël Lebeaume





    Chapter 3



    Epistemic Gender Positioning: An Analytical Concept to (Re)consider Classroom Practices within the French Didactique Research Tradition



    Chantal Amade-Escot



    Paired Dialogue: Subjects of Learning and Pedagogical Encounters



    Susanne Gannon





    Chapter 4



    Queering Dissection: ‘I Wanted to Bury its Heart, at Least’



    Sara Tolbert



    Paired Dialogue: Didactic Transposition of Scientific Knowledge in the Classroom



    Florence Ligozat





    Chapter 5



    Gender, the Postmodern Paradigm Shift, and Pedagogical Anthropology



    Anja Kraus



    Paired Dialogue: Ways of Knowing: Bodies, Knowledge and Power



    Carol Taylor





    Chapter 6



    Tackling Intersecting Gender Inequalities through Disciplinary Based Higher Education Curricula: A Bernsteinian Approach



    Andrea Abbas



    Paired Dialogue: Can a Bernsteinian Focus on Intersecting Gender Inequalities Support Curriculum and Disciplinary change?



    Isabelle Collet





    Chapter 7



    An Historical Exploration of Gender Representations in French Scientific and Technological Education School Textbooks



    Joël Lebeaume



    Paired Dialogue: Gender Differentiation in Craft and Domestic Education: Contrasting National Approaches



    Carrie Paechter





    Chapter 8



    Temporalities, Pedagogies and Gender-Based Violence Education in Australian Schools



    Susanne Gannon



    Paired Dialogue: Toward an Articulation of the Two Layers of Didactic Transposition



    Chantal Amade-Escot





    Chapter 9



    Butterflies for Girls, Tornadoes for Boys: Primary School Science Teaching in France and Geneva



    Isabelle Collet



    Paired Dialogue: Pokemon, Dragons and Dinosaurs: A Narrative of Gender and Science In/Exclusions and Why Tackling Them Matters



    Sara Tolbert





    Chapter 10



    Playing, Teaching and Caring: Generative Productions of Gender and Pedagogy In/Through Early Years Assemblages



    Nikki Fairchild



    Paired Dialogue: Humanities, Pedagogy and Didactics: The Tacit Dimensions of Early Childhood Education



    Anja Kraus



    Chapter 11



    Students’ Gendered Learning in Physical Education: A Didactic Study of a French Multi-Ethnic Middle School in an Underprivileged Area



    Ingrid Verscheure and Claire Debars



    Paired Dialogue: Sport, Physical Education and Gender: Analysing Complex Pedagogic Encounters



    Andreas Abbas





    Chapter 12



    Beyond Binary Discourses: Making LGBTQ

    Biography

    Carol A. Taylor is Professor of Higher Education and Gender at the University of Bath, UK. Her research utilizes feminist, new materialist and posthumanist theories and methodologies to explore gendered inequalities, spatial practices, and staff and students’ participation in a range of higher educational sites. Her latest co-edited book is Posthuman Research Practices in Education (with Christina Hughes) and she is a co-editor of the journal Gender and Education.



    Chantal Amade-Escot is Professor of Educational Sciences at the University of Toulouse – Jean Jaurès, France. Her research interests lie in the situated process of teaching and learning with a focus on gender, teacher and students’ joint action, teachers’ practical epistemology and the specificity of the content. She is also interested in the analytical power of the conceptual constructions developed by subject didactics research in classrooms. She is a co-editor of the French international journal Education & Didactics.



    Andrea Abbas is Head of the Department of Education at the University of Bath, UK. Her research uses critical sociological theory to explore how gender and intersecting differences (age, class, disability, ethnicity) are challenged, perpetuated or transformed through educational practices and experiences. She co-leads the China Centre at the University of Bath. Her latest book is Quality in Undergraduate Education (with Monica McLean and Paul Ashwin).

    "Gender in Learning and Teaching presents an intriguing set of chapters that explore both the interstices between feminist theory, European didactics, and the Anglophone tradition in teaching and learning and the points of interference that challenge those of us from differing philosophical and research positions to a more nuanced appreciation of the complexities of these interactions. Coming from the "Anglophone" quarter, I appreciate the didactical fine grained exploration of how various disciplines are constructed and then reproduced or transformed in pedagogy and curriculum that is presented in many of the book's chapters. The debates across traditions, which materialize with the innovative use of paired dialogues, provide nuance for the main argument. At their best, they serve to problematize the arguments of the main chapter opening them up for further exploration. The chapters in this book served to highlight that when it comes to gender there is so much more that needs to be done within education especially in contexts involving vulnerable groups of learners."

    Catherine Milne, Professor of Science Education, New York University.