[BOOK][B] The feminist classroom: Dynamics of gender, race, and privilege

FA Maher, MKT Tetreault - 2001 - books.google.com
FA Maher, MKT Tetreault
2001books.google.com
The issues explored in The Feminist Classroom are as timely and controversial today as
they were when the book first appeared six years ago. This expanded edition offers new
material that rereads and updates previous chapters, including a major new chapter on the
role of race. The authors offer specific new classroom examples of how assumptions of
privilege, specifically the workings of unacknowledged whiteness, shape classroom
discourses. This edition also goes beyond the classroom, to examine the present context of …
The issues explored in The Feminist Classroom are as timely and controversial today as they were when the book first appeared six years ago. This expanded edition offers new material that rereads and updates previous chapters, including a major new chapter on the role of race. The authors offer specific new classroom examples of how assumptions of privilege, specifically the workings of unacknowledged whiteness, shape classroom discourses. This edition also goes beyond the classroom, to examine the present context of American higher education. Drawing on in-depth interviews and using the actual words of students and teachers, the authors take the reader into classrooms at six colleges and universities-Lewis and Clark College, Wheaton College, the University of Arizona, Towson State University, Spelman College, and San Francisco State University. The result is an intimate view of the pedagogical approaches of seventeen feminist college professors. Feminist scholars have demonstrated that American higher education has long represented a white, male, privileged minority. The professors here bring together the twin upheavals that have challenged this tradition: namely a rapidly changing student body and the more inclusive knowledge of feminist and multicultural scholarship. They uncover the voices, concerns and experiences of groups hitherto marginalized in higher education: women, people of color and working class students. Through concrete examples of classroom practice, the work of these professors challenge the traditional split between knowledge and pedagogy that has long characterized higher education.
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