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OverviewPower Play tells the story of activist teachers and the very young together in a play-based curriculum in a public school in Texas. The authors narrate (with playful interruptions) a curriculum that is powered by the students’ lived encounters—the languages, landscapes, beliefs, histories, geographies, politics, economies, ideas, people, things, matter, and matters of fact and fiction that students carry with them to school, that carry them to school, through school, through their lives. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Tim Kinard , Jesse Gainer , Mary Esther Soto HuertaPublisher: Peter Lang Publishing Inc Imprint: Peter Lang Publishing Inc Edition: New edition Volume: 4 Weight: 0.380kg ISBN: 9781433134142ISBN 10: 1433134144 Pages: 242 Publication Date: 30 November 2017 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsGaile S. Cannella: Foreword – Acknowledgments – Beginnings – Explorando – Empujando – El Juego Conmueve.ReviewsThe authors offer a refreshing, critically grounded book that pushes the multiple boundaries and fronteras that children, teachers, and la comunidad cross and transform every day. Through the power of storytelling and the varied critical scholarship presented, childhood education in Tejas can be experienced as a `trans-dimensional co-existence' for bilingual, bicultural children in Tejas and beyond-a necessary re-imagination. It is a must read for anyone interested in the nuevas posibilidades within contemporary critical childhood studies. -CINTHYA M. SAAVEDRA, THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS RIO GRANDE VALLEY We need this book. It leaves no question about the need to dismantle the stronghold of colonized myths about language, play, risk, readiness, and childhood as the authors draw us artfully and eloquently into children's worlds. With love and concern for children most misrepresented as well as for those who learn bias through those misrepresentations, they urge us to resist and replace dominant deficit ideologies to create spaces of justice for children today so that they are poised to contribute to a more just society tomorrow. -SUSI LONG, UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH CAROLINA The storytelling text found in this unique book-and more importantly, the critical, relational pedagogical perspectives and emergent actions that are demonstrated on the ground with young children-are urgently needed. Critical educational methodologies that would value the diversities within and all around us, as well as lead to increased justice and equity, are an absolute necessity. I visited the program in the summer of 2017 and was inspired by the perspectives, actions, and agendas of the children, their diverse teachers (both in-service and pre-service), and the activist researcher authors of this volume, who also work as children's teachers in the program. -FROM THE FOREWORD BY GAILE S. CANNELLA The storytelling text found in this unique book-and more importantly, the critical, relational pedagogical perspectives and emergent actions that are demonstrated on the ground with young children-are urgently needed. Critical educational methodologies that would value the diversities within and all around us, as well as lead to increased justice and equity, are an absolute necessity. I visited the program in the summer of 2017 and was inspired by the perspectives, actions, and agendas of the children, their diverse teachers (both in-service and pre-service), and the activist researcher authors of this volume, who also work as children's teachers in the program. -FROM THE FOREWORD BY GAILE S. CANNELLA The authors offer a refreshing, critically grounded book that pushes the multiple boundaries and fronteras that children, teachers, and la comunidad cross and transform every day. Through the power of storytelling and the varied critical scholarship presented, childhood education in Tejas can be experienced as a `trans-dimensional co-existence' for bilingual, bicultural children in Tejas and beyond-a necessary re-imagination. It is a must read for anyone interested in the nuevas posibilidades within contemporary critical childhood studies. -CINTHYA M. SAAVEDRA, THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS RIO GRANDE VALLEY We need this book. It leaves no question about the need to dismantle the stronghold of colonized myths about language, play, risk, readiness, and childhood as the authors draw us artfully and eloquently into children's worlds. With love and concern for children most misrepresented as well as for those who learn bias through those misrepresentations, they urge us to resist and replace dominant deficit ideologies to create spaces of justice for children today so that they are poised to contribute to a more just society tomorrow. -SUSI LONG, UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH CAROLINA Author InformationTim Kinard is Associate Professor of Early Learning at Texas State University. Jesse Gainer is Associate Professor of Literacy Education at Texas State University. Mary Esther Soto Huerta is Associate Professor of Culture, Literacy, and Language at Texas State University. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |