AESA 2017 Critics’ Choice Book Awards

An announcement from Eleanor Blair, Western Carolina UniversityCritics’ Choice Book Awards, Chair:  Congratulations to the winners!

AESA 2017 Critics’ Choice Book Award Winners

Au, W., Brown, A., & Calderon, D. (2016). Reclaiming the Multicultural
Roots of U.S. Curriculum: Communities of Color and Official Knowledge
in Education. New York:  Teachers College Press.

Camicia, S. P. (2016). Critical Democratic Education and
LGBTQ-Inclusive Curriculum: Opportunities and Constraints. New York:
Routledge.

Carter, J. & Lochte, H. (Eds.) (2017). Teacher Performance Assessment
and Accountability Reforms: The Impacts of edTPA on Teaching and
Schools.  New York: Palgrave McMillan.

Cervantes-Soon, C.G. (2016).  Juarez Girls Rising: Transformative
Education in Times of Dystopia. Minneapolis, MN:  University of
Minnesota Press.

Childers, S.M. (2017).  Urban Educational Identity: Seeing Students on
Their Own Terms. New York: Routledge.

Douglas, T. M. O. (2016). Border Crossing Brothas: Black Males
Navigating Race, Place, and Complex Space. New York: Peter Lang
Publishers.

Gottesman, Isaac. (2016). The Critical Turn in Education: From Marxist
Critique to Poststructuralist Feminism to Critical Theories of Race.
New York: Routledge.

Meiners, E. R. (2016). For the Children: Protecting Innocence in a
Carceral State. Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press.

Noddings, N. and Brooks, L. (2017). Teaching Controversial Issues: The
Case for Critical Thinking and Moral Commitment in the Classroom. New
York: Teachers College Press.

Sanders, C.R. (2016).  A Chance for Change: Head Start and
Mississippi’s Black Freedom Struggle. Chapel Hill, NC: University of
North Carolina Press.

Tavares, H.M. (2016).  Pedagogies of the Image: Photo-archives,
Cultural Histories, and Postfoundational Inquiry. Springer Nature
Publishing.

Wolfmeyer, M.  (2017).  Mathematics Education: A Critical
Introduction.  New York:  Taylor & Francis.

 

 

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AESA Statement of Concern

Greetings, AESA members and other listserv subscribers…

The Executive Council of the American Educational Studies Association
directs your attention to the following statement:

STATEMENT OF CONCERN (4/27/17)
The Executive Council of the American Educational Studies Association
wants to express publicly our deep concern about recent U.S.
executive, legislative, and judicial actions taken at odds with AESA’s
most deeply held values.  In the face of such actions, we want to
reaffirm truth, love, and justice as AESA’S guiding values.  AESA’s
scholarly commitments to public education, to democracy and the arts,
to cultural diversity and environmental sustainability, educational
equality and equity are reflected in our Standards for Academic and
Professional Instruction in Foundations of Education, Educational
Studies, and Educational Policy Studies.  Recent political rhetoric
and actions have imperiled our conscientious work to uphold them.

Our members’ language, inquiries, situations, standpoints, and
strategies for interpreting, expressing, and transmitting those deeply
shared core values in multiple disciplines are various and
dynamic–ever subject to elaboration, critical debate, and mutual
deliberation, irreducible to any dogma.  Yet the intensity of our
present shared concern moves us to make this brief public statement.

We condemn the targeting of any named religious, racial, sexual,
differently-abled, or ethnic group for exclusionary, discriminatory,
violent, and hateful speech or action as inconsistent with the
nation’s democratic ideals—harmful to children and profoundly
miseducative.  We hold dear the United States’ historic hospitality to
refugees from oppression elsewhere, so eloquently proclaimed on the
Statue of Liberty, yet so often abused and selectively applied, and
welcome diverse arts and humanities scholars and social-scientific
researchers who bring conscientious imagination, critical
intelligence, and practical wisdom to the educational challenges that
this national hospitality and its merciless contradictions require us
to meet.  We deplore the privatization and commercialization of public
schools and public colleges and universities as profoundly
undemocratic.  We value education that respects truths and their
experienced and observed complexities from diversely situated
perspectives; we condemn public deceit and falsehoods as public
miseducation.  We reject public attitudes of denial and indifference
toward the scientifically documented ecological crisis that now
afflicts our entire planet, damaging land, air, and water, and harming
human children while endangering countless species; such irresponsible
attitudes are profoundly miseducative.

All these severe challenges call for educators’ courage, creativity,
and wisdom.  These challenges impart practical urgency to AESA
members’ rigorous educational inquiry, thought, and criticism.  They
require our deliberate curricular, pedagogical, program, policy, and
community initiatives, in pragmatic ethical responses to these
challenges.  They demand our strategically vocal, conscientious
engagement in public controversies concerning them as well.

Sent by:
Jennifer Stoops
Social Media Fellow, Urban Education
The Graduate Center, CUNY

Communications Director
American Educational Studies Association

 

John Dewey Society at AERA

Here are two messages from the Society.  The first concerns corrected information about room locations.  The second provides information about the meeting and includes a PDF with the schedule of JDS events.  — Edprof
Hi, Friends,

Just a heads up. What we have been calling Room 5 at the Gonzalez Center, based on information from AERA, is really Riverwalk 005.  You will find this room just off of the West Lobby along the River.

Please tell everyone you know.

Rob, as soon s you get this, please send an urgent message by email to all of our members.

Len

Leonard J. Waks, Ph. D.
President: John Dewey Society

Professor Emeritus of Educational Leadership,  Temple University
New Books:
-Education 2.0 : The LearningWeb Revolution and the Transformation of the School (Paradigm Press, 2013)
-Listening to Teach: Beyond Didactic Pedagogy (SUNY Press, 2015)
General Editor: LEADERS IN EDUCATIONAL STUDIES
https://www.sensepublishers.com/catalogs/bookseries/leaders-in-educational-studies/

website: http://www.leonardwaks.net
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/leonard.waks
Twitter: https://twitter.com/ljwaks
Email: ljwaks@yahoo.com
Cell: 267-455-5109

 

Hello Members and Friends of the John Dewey Society,

We invite you all to attend the JDS annual meeting taking place April 27 and 28 during the AERA conference in San Antonio, TX at the Henry Gonzalez Convention Center.

The theme of this years’s conference is:
Creative Democracy – The Task Before Us in the Era of Clinton v. Trump

Please see the attached program and know that all events are free and open to the public, so bring your colleagues and students along.

We hope you will join us for what promises to be relevant insights into how we may reclaim democratic life and public education in the age of Donald Trump.

Looking forward,
Robert Karaba–JDS Director of Communications

JDS2017ScheduleMembersMemo_final

Link

The Council for Social Foundations (CSFE) business meeting is scheduled for Friday, November 4, 8 – 9:30 AM in the Douglas Boardroom, Grand Hyatt, Seattle, Washington.  All are welcome and leaders of social foundations organizations are encouraged to attend.

The AESA Committee on Standards and Accreditation business meeting is scheduled for Saturday, November 5, 9:45 – 11:15 in Portland A.

The full AESA Program is available online at http://educationalstudies.org  The conference theme is “Love, Labor and Learning: Under the Gun”

programaesa16final

Link to AESA 2016 program

Call for Papers (SPSE)

The Society for the Philosophical Study of Education (SPSE)

 Annual Meeting
4th and 5th November 2016
Columbia College, Chicago, IL

 The SPSE16 Program Committee invites philosophically oriented papers related to education in the widest sense for presentation at its Annual Meeting.

Submissions from graduate students are enthusiastically encouraged & accepted papers will be considered for the SPSE graduate student awards.

Papers accepted for presentation will be considered for publication in the Journal of the Philosophical Study of Education (JPSE).

  1. Proposals of no more than 500 words.
  1. Send as word.doc or PDF to dmosley@bellarmine.edu.
  1. Designate “SPSE 2016” in the subject line.
  1. Provide the following in the body of your e-mail.
    Name
    Institutional Affiliation
    Email address
  1. Deadline for submission is 01 OCTOBER 2016.

Please contact David L. Mosley (dmosley@bellarmine.edu) with any questions

cfp_spse16

AESA 2016 Annual Meeting Call

March 15, 2016

Greetings AESA members and others,
Waesa-call-2016e would like to announce the call for proposals for the 2016 American Educational Studies Association Conference.  Please note: AESA membership is deliberating conference dates and location. Updates to this call will be made as soon as a decision is reached.

Conference Theme: Love, Labor, and Learning Under the Gun: A Call for Education Writ Large with Visionary Pragmatism  (See attached AESA Call 2016).

MAY DAY SUBMISSION DEADLINE:  May 1, 2016. All proposals must be submitted electronically to the Online Conference System (OCS) via the AESA website.  It will open April 1, 2016 (5:00 pm CST) and close on International Labor Day, May 1, 2016 (11:59 CST).  MAY DAY is the final deadline, not a faux deadline! Participants must plan ahead to make this May 1st deadline. Notifications of proposals’ acceptance or rejections will be sent on or before August 15, 2016

Questions? Contact AESA President Elect/Program Chair Susan Laird at

laird@ou.edu

AESA Call for Papers 2016

aesa-call-2016   (PDF)

AESA Website

John Dewey Society Achievement Awards

Dear JDS members,
Just a reminder that our Awards Committee is seeking nominations for JDS Achievement Awards. The date by which nominations should be received is February 15. A list of past JDS Award recipients is available on our website.

The Awards Committee has put together the following criteria and invites nominations for either of the awards:

John Dewey Society Award for Outstanding Lifetime Achievement
The Award for Outstanding Lifetime Achievement will be awarded to the individual who, in the judgment of the committee, exemplifies, over a lifetime of work, the Deweyan tradition of connecting theory and practice. Each year, the award will recognize: a scholar-practitioner who, in the Deweyan tradition, connects the worlds of theory and practice in promoting the development of democratic citizens; or an exceptional explicator and interpreter of Dewey?s philosophy and educational theory.

John Dewey Society Award for Outstanding Achievement
The Awards for Outstanding Achievement will be awarded to those individuals who, in the judgment of the committee, have most strongly exemplified the Deweyan tradition of connecting theory and practice. Each year, the awards will recognize significant achievements in scholarship and/or in social, cultural, or educational practice accomplished within the two previous calendar years (January ? December).

Any member may nominate a candidate for either of the JDS awards, and members are free to self-nominate. A nomination must be sent to John Covaleskie, chair of the nominating committee, at jcovales@ou.edu, along with a letter explaining how the candidate qualifies for such an award, taking into consideration the specified criteria. If members of the awards committee are nominated for any award, they must recuse themselves from voting for that award.
Best wishes to you all,

Kyle

CSFE and CASA 2015 Annual Business Meetings

The Council for Foundations of Education (CSFE) will hold its annual business meeting in conjunction with the American Educational Studies Association (AESA) Annual Meeting at the Grand Hyatt in San Antonio, Texas. Here are the details:

Cruising-the-Riverwalk-Bob-Howen-VisitSanAntonio

Riverwalk, San Antonio, Texas

CSFE Business meeting, Thursday, November 12, 1:45 – 3:15 PM in the Goliad Boardroom.  Leaders of member organizations and appointed delegates are welcome, as are interested others.  For information about CSFE, contact Jan Armstrong, Jessica Heybach or Kathleen deMarrais.

AESA Committee on Academic Standards and Accreditation (CASA) Business meeting, Friday, November 13, 8:00 – 10:00 AM in the Goliad Boardroom. For information about CASA, contact Amy Swain.

Call for Papers: SEPES and SAPES 2016

CALL FOR PAPERS — Proposals Due November 1, 2015

For the 68th Meeting of the
SOUTHEAST PHILOSOPHY OF EDUCATION SOCIETY
and the 60th Meeting of the
SOUTH ATLANTIC PHILOSOPHY OF EDUCATION SOCIETY

February 4-6, 2016 Asheville, NC

We encourage you to participate in a joint meeting of the Southeast Philosophy of Education Society (SEPES) and the South Atlantic Philosophy of Education Society (SAPES) in Asheville, North Carolina, February 4-6, 2016. Given the substantial challenges facing educational institutions in general, and philosophical inquiry within and about them in particular, we believe it is increasingly important to create a space in which current and emerging scholars and practitioners can engage in meaningful dialogue and discussion. To that end, and building upon the long traditions of each organization in providing a friendly forum for conversations concerning philosophical ideas related to a broad variety of educational topics, SEPES and SAPES invite you to submit proposals for our first joint meeting….[[Download complete Call for Papers PDF below.]]

Proposals should be no more than 500 words, excluding references, and should be submitted online through the following link: http://tinyurl.com/sepes-sapes

The presentation time for papers is approximately 15 to 20 minutes, and presenters are responsible for bringing all required technology. THE DEADLINE FOR RECEIVING PROPOSALS IS NOVEMBER 1, 2015.  Please send all questions to sepesociety@gmail.com.

Conference Accommodations:
Doubletree Asheville-Biltmore
115 Hendersonville Road
Asheville, NC 28803
$109 per guest room/per night
http://www.doubletreeasheville.com/

Many thanks, and looking forward to seeing you in Asheville.

Dr. Daniel Saunders, Program Chair, SEPES,
Matthew Reid, Program Coordinator, SAPES

SEPES-SAPES2016 CFP

Philosophy of Education Society (PES) Annual Meeting

Here are two announcements from PES Annual Meeting Program Chair, Eduardo Duarte.  — Jan A.

First, please take a look at the PES Memphis blog, featuring a list of accepted papers:  http://pes2015memphis.blogspot.com

Second, please take note of the Graduate Student Pre-conference CFP below:

Philosophy of Education Society Annual Meeting — Making Philosophy of Education: A Graduate Student Pre-Conference Workshop
Thursday, March 12, 2015  –  2-7 pm  – Memphis Westin Beale Street
Working retrospectively and prospectively we are seeking to make originary philosophy of education at PES 2015. Toward that end,  graduate students in the field are invited to engage in a pre-conference workshop and take up the question energizing our gathering in Memphis: How do we make philosophy of education?  The pre-conference workshop aims to examine the articulation, production and dissemination of philosophy of education.  The five hour event will include a group dinner at the Keough Café.  The workshop will have two parts.  The first half will produce a set of theses in response to the question: How do we make philosophy of education?  Participants will be asked to think about the past and present work in the field, and to envision and articulate new possibilities. The second part of the event will be a hands-on workshop geared toward practical advice for navigating the job market.  It will include faculty who have recently completed successful searches and those who have been on hiring committees.  Feedback on CV construction, letter writing, and other concrete aspects of the search process. Participants are encouraged to bring their materials for sharing and review.  The second part will be lead by JOPE chair, Nakia Pope, along with Cara Furman (U Maine, Farmington), Tyson Lewis (UNT), and Sam Rocha (UBC).  Please join for this unique experience to make the future of PES!

The workshop is a first-come, first-serve open-enrollment event.  Deadline to enroll is February 6, 2015.    Any and all inquiries should be sent electronically to Eduardo Duarte, PES 2015 Program Chair

PES2015Memphis@gmail.com.     This workshop is collaboration between PES Memphis 2015, PES JOPE, GSCOPE 2015, with support from PES 2015 President Frank Margonis.