We look forward to seeing you all in October!
]]>Extended Deadline: August 15th!
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Early Career Award
This award is given to one early career scholar who best demonstrates a consistent commitment to the critical study of curriculum and cultural studies scholarship. Applicants must have completed doctoral work no more than six years prior to submission. Scholars may nominate themselves or another scholar.
To be considered for the award, submit a curriculum vitae and three papers or articles that have either been published or presented at a professional conference. The award recipient will be recognized at the annual conference in New Orleans, LA.
Submission Process
The Awards Committee for this year is chaired by Debbie Sonu. All application materials must be submitted via email with subject line “SIG Award Application: (name)” to debbie.sonu@gmail.com by December 19, 2010.

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Anna Oerther & Julie Burke, Program Coordinators
Guilford College
Education Studies Department
5800 W. Friendly Ave.
Greensboro, NC 27410
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Conferences Committee,
Erik Malewski, Chair
Shay Mayer
Molly Quinn
Jim Jupp
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October 20-24, 2010
Akron, Ohio
C&P on Facebook (click here or go to http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=48984828263)
Complicating Borders, Dialogues and Understandings of Curriculum and Pedagogy
Proposal Submissions Deadline: JULY 7, 2010
Until the great mass of the people shall be filled with the sense of responsibility for each other’s welfare, social justice can never be attained. – Helen Keller
It isn’t enough to talk about peace. One must believe in it. And it isn’t enough to believe in it. One must work at it. – Eleanor Roosevelt
Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere. – Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
Be the change that you want to see in the world. – Mahatma Gandhi
The Curriculum and Pedagogy Conference is an annual gathering of diverse individuals seeking academic enrichment and professional engagement who are committed to educational reform and social change. The conference opens spaces to advance the ideals of progressive curriculum and democratic leadership in education through dialogue and action. The conference organizers seek to bring together individuals from diverse settings, including academics, graduate students, school district administrators, PreK-12 teachers, and all other cultural and educational workers from community groups and organizations who hope to integrate, interrogate, and develop theories and practices for educational change and social justice.
The conference fosters an open and affirming environment for democratic community building, collective scholarship, and social action. In the spirit of visionaries such as Maxine Greene, John Dewey, George Counts, Alice Miel, Horace Mann Bond, and others, we gather together to deepen our critical insights into the historical, political, personal, aesthetic, spiritual contexts of our work within a perspective that regards curriculum studies as integral to the fabric of everyday public life and wholly connected to the daily pedagogical practices of/within/about schools.
The 11th Annual meeting of the Annual Curriculum and Pedagogy Conference will take place on October 20-23, 2010 in Akron, OH at the Akron City Centre Hotel. In consideration of conference participant feedback from the 2009 conference and C&P Council’s further reflections on transparency in curriculum and pedagogy policies, structures, and voices, this year’s conference theme—Complicating Borders, Dialogues and Understandings of Curriculum and Pedagogy—opens up spaces for us, as researchers, as teachers, as pedagogues, to trouble and wonder about the intersections of curriculum and pedagogy.
The 2010 conference in Akron, Ohio seeks participants who are willing to draw upon their educational and lived experiences as well as their intellectual thought and reflections in an effort to complicate understandings of curriculum and pedagogy. Moreover, we seek participants who are comfortable with the journey, the reflection through deliberation and scrutiny, and the consideration of multiple understandings of ideas and experiences concerning curriculum and pedagogy (Lummis, 1996).
We, however, resist the enacting of this reflection as “confessional” – as a way to move us toward some kind of “cathar-sis of self-awareness” that provides a “cure” (Pillow, 2003, p. 181) and helps us feel as if we have dealt with issues of representation and definition and thus can move on in peace. Instead, we hope to encourage a kind of “reflexivity of discomfort” (p. 181), where issues are not neatly resolved, but, rather, where we acknowledge and inhabit unease, tentativeness, and uncertainty. Following Ellsworth (2005), we believe these in-between, uncomfortable spaces are where transformative learning can take place.
Some representative questions that reflect the conference theme are:
Ellsworth, E. (2005). Places of learning: Media, architecture, and pedagogy. New York: Routledge.
Lummis, C. D. (1996). Radical democracy. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.
Pillow, W. S. (2003). Confession, catharsis, or cure? Rethinking the uses of reflexivity as methodological power in qualitative research. International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education, 16, 175-196.
Program Strands
All proposals should be submitted according to one of the following conference strands intended to encourage (but not limit) deliberate lines of inquiry:
“Colouring Curriculum and Pedagogy”
This year, the “Browning Caucus” of the Curriculum & Pedagogy group is making a special call for papers that specifically address and invite an awareness of the critical importance of scholarship that focuses on race, nation, and their intersections with multiple forms of oppression such as gender, sexuality, and class, to curriculum studies. We invite proposals that focus on strategies and priorities for fomenting the proliferation of multiple approaches to critical race/anti-racist, postcolonial/anti-colonial, decolonizing, and indigenous scholarship in curriculum studies and to recognize and challenge the pervading hetero-patriarchal white supremacy of the field and how it manifests in the field of curriculum studies. Scholars who identify or work with communities of colour and/or who draw on the activist and intellectual traditions of peoples of colour, third world feminism, indigenous liberation/sovereignty, civil rights, and anti-colonial movements are particularly encouraged to submit papers. For additional information please contact the strand chairs, Cole Reilly at CReilly@towson.edu or Zahra Murad at zahra_murad@yahoo.ca. Proposals for this Colouring Curriculum and Pedagogy should be submitted by JULY 7, 2010 to: candpccp@gmail.com
Arts and Alternative Inquiry for Social Change
Proposals for this strand should include visual art, performing arts, performances, fiction, personal essays, other forms of creative writing (both completed and in progress) that promote social change and address this year’s theme. Submissions of works in progress are welcomed and will be shared and discussed in a workshop format. The vision for this strand is to emphasize inquiry that engages artists, educators, scholars, and community activists who practice various art media to examine social issues of democracy, equity, and community change. Alternative presentation locations can include visual art gallery format, dramatic/movement spaces, and indoor and outdoor public spaces within and around the conference location. Additionally, this strand includes a writing workshop format that serves as an experimental space to explore works in progress. This space serves for anyone, beginners and seasoned writers alike, who would like collaborative, small group input on their writing process and discussion of their work. For additional information please contact the strand chairs, Chris Higgins at chrishiggins25@hotmail.com or Morna McDermott at mmcdermott@towson.edu. Proposals for this strand should be submitted by JULY 7, 2010 to: candpaber@gmail.com
Mentoring
New or inexperienced conference presenters submitting single-authored proposals/papers (e.g., graduate students, recent graduates, PreK-12 teachers and administrators new to scholarly conference presentation, and any others who may just be joining us) are warmly invited to submit their proposals to the Mentoring Strand. Presentations will be made in small groups of graduate students, recent graduates, and first-time conference attendees with similar research interests or questions. Participants, joined by one or two faculty mentors and other interested conference participants, will take part in focused, small-group discussions of their work. Presenters will exchange drafts of their work prior to the conference to facilitate active discussion at the conference. Proposals for the mentoring strand ought to reflect a line of inquiry compatible with one of the other strands listed here. For additional information, please contact the strand chair, Kris Sloan at kriss@stedwards.edu. Proposals for this strand should be submitted by JULY 7, 2010 to: candpmentoring@gmail.com
Public Moral Leadership
Proposals for this strand should be grounded in the notions of moral knowledge, actions, dispositions, and beliefs in leadership. Particular attention should be paid to moral leadership as situated in schools, programs, and society for the advancement of democracy. For additional information, please contact the strand chair, Jake Burdick at steven.burdick@asu.edu. Proposals for this strand should be submitted by JULY 7, 2010 to: candppml@gmail.com
Social Action, Then and Now
Proposals for this strand should address historical and contemporary ideas and actions that can inform deliberations about democratic struggles and social change within schools and within the broader civil society. For additional information, please contact the strand chair, Jenn Snow at jennifersnow@boisestate.edu. Proposals for this strand should be submitted by JULY 7, 2010Â to: candpsatn@gmail.com.
Theory in Motion
Theory often informs practice as well as practice may inform theory. Proposals for this strand should be grounded within the everyday lives of PreK-12 and university education in which praxis, the intersection of theory and practice, is made real. For additional information, please contact the strand chair, Jenny Sandlin at jennifer.sandlin@asu.edu. Proposals for this strand should be submitted by JULY 7, 2010 to: candptheory@gmail.com
Transformative Curriculum Development
Pedagogical notions and theories are represented and enacted within classrooms in material ways. Proposals for this strand should address issues related to curricular materials or instructional models either currently in use or in design for PreK-12 and university settings. Historical analyses are also welcomed. For additional information, please contact the strand chair, Jenn Milam at jenn.milam@uakron.edu. Proposals for this strand should be submitted by JULY 7, 2010 to: candptcd@gmail.com
Making Meaning of Research, Measurement and Assessment
Mainstream practices of research, measurement and assessment dominate current policies and practices in education. A curriculum wisdom paradigm challenges such narrowly constructed theories and practices by strongly regarding participants’ understanding of the world. This strand welcomes proposals that challenge mainstream or narrowly-focused assessment and inquiry in the planning, evaluation and interpretation of curriculum and other processes in education. For additional information, please contact the strand chair, Patti Bullock at pbulloc2@kennesaw.edu. Proposals for this strand should be submitted by JULY 7, 2010 to: candpmmrma@gmail.com
Submission Process and Deadline
Curriculum and Pedagogy scholarship is characterized by commitments to advancing the complicated conversations of curriculum studies, theory, and practice with intellectual rigor. Proposals should be submitted electronically to the email address provided within each strand description no later than midnight, JULY 7, 2010. Please direct any questions about the proposal process, strand description, or conference theme to a Strand Chair (email address noted within each strand description) or Program Chairs, Patti Bullock at pbulloc2@kennesaw.edu, or Jennifer Snow at jennifersnow@boisestate.edu.
All proposals will undergo a blind review.
Proposal Guidelines and Format
To ensure the integrity of review and follow up, please use the format below in the order indicated here:
1. Title of proposal
2. Indicate presentation venue
a. Roundtable Paper
Please note that technology is not provided; presenters are welcome to bring their own laptops; wireless internet access is available on site.
b. Performance-Based/Art Exhibition
Please describe the performance or exhibition, type of space needed (large room, outdoors, etc.), and technology requests (audio-visual, projectors, etc.). We will have a very limited number of laptops and projectors available for use.
c. Multiple Paper Session/Panel
Proposal of a group of 3 or more scholarly papers addressing a related topic/idea. Technology requests will be honored if possible but cannot be guaranteed. We will have a very limited number of laptops and projectors available for use.
d. Public Presentation
In keeping with the mission of the Curriculum and Pedagogy conference we invite sessions in “public venues” (outside of the conference hotel). Such venues may include: local independent book stores or in local schools and community centers. Typical conference papers, round tables, poster sessions and symposiums can take place in these venues but we also invite sessions that would foster a more critical and public dialogue.
IMPORTANT: Please be very clear about your audio/visual/technology needs. We will do our best to accommodate requests as they are received.
3. Strand Name
Please indicate the Conference Strand (see descriptions above) which your proposed paper/presentation most reflects in theme and purpose.
4. Abstract
Please limit your abstract to 30 words maximum – we will include this brief statement in the conference program.
5. Description
In no more than 500 words, provide a scholarly description of proposed work (including content such as purpose, methodology, discussion, and conclusion, when applicable) and how the proposed presentation is related to/supportive of the conference theme. In addition, include references/works cited.
To ensure that all proposals are organized appropriately for blind review, please include the following information in your proposal, but beginning on a separate page following the content of your proposal outlined above.
6. Name and Contact Information
Please include full name, e-mail(s), phone number(s), and address(es) of participant(s)
7. Affiliation(s)
Please indicate positions/appointments for each presenter (K-12 teacher, K-12 administrator, graduate student, university faculty, community agency representative, etc.) as well as the name of school, university or organization. (For example: K-12 teacher, Phillips High School & doctoral student, University of Central Florida.)
Note:Â Roundtable sessions will be the primary venue for paper presentations. We will try our best to honor all venue requests, but scheduling limitations may require that some papers be rescheduled as roundtable paper sessions. Should this become necessary, first authors will be contacted during scheduling. While we cannot consider individual requests for scheduling presentations, we will do our best to respond to extenuating circumstances. Please indicate particular circumstances (in your proposal) you may have regarding the scheduling of your presentation. While we will try, we cannot, however, guarantee that we will be able to accommodate all such requests. Please honor the JULY 7, 2010 deadline in order to help facilitate our planning and scheduling for the conference.
]]>Guest Editor: Walter S. Gershon, Kent State University
Human beings understand themselves and their environments through the senses—they are the ways in which we perceive our lives and ourselves in relation to others. We therefore make sense of our worlds literally and figuratively. However, the meanings we make through sight, smell, sound, taste and touch are context dependent, predicated as much on local and more broad norms and values as our own personal preferences. As such, where sensory perception is information that we attain through our senses, the meanings ascribed to those perceptions are simultaneously deeply personal as well as ideologically and aesthetically dependent. In short, sense making is political, one possible interpretation among many possibilities.
There has been increasing attention to arts-based/influenced understandings within education and to sensory ways of knowing in fields outside of education. Although there certainly is a history of work that considers curriculum and the senses, work that examines curriculum through the senses is far less common. This is in part due to the strength of reading human interactions and social phenomenon as “big t” Text and in part to an emphasis in curriculum studies to understanding curricular phenomenon as Text. Yet, while reading interactions and phenomena as text can be critically informative and creates the space for their deconstruction and other important kinds of examinations, this interpretive move can also serve to remove the very kinds of non-text-based sensual understandings that render bodies (as but one example) so rich in meaning and possibility.
This special issue seeks to push at current conceptual boundaries in the relationships between curriculum and the senses. Contributions to this special issue have been framed in the following manner. Roughly half of the issue will correspond to each of the five senses, examining the ways in which that particular sense intersects with questions of curriculum, writ broadly. The remaining entries will address the relationship between curriculum and the senses in a more holistic, general fashion; these pieces can, however, foreground a particular sense in order to illustrate more general curricular, sensory understandings. Attention will be paid to help ensure a diversity of fields, methods, institutions, and sensual perspectives.
Authors wishing to submit manuscripts in response to this call must have their work submitted via the Journal of Curriculum Theorizing website (http://journal.jctonline.org/index.php/jct) no later than October 1, 2010. All manuscripts will be subject to a double-blind review process. Potential authors will be notified of their acceptance to this issue by December 1, 2010 with an expected publication date of September 2011. Manuscripts should be prepared according to the author’s guideline posted on the JCT website (http://journal.jctonline.org/index.php/jct/about/submissions#authorGuidelines). Please note that these requirements include that the manuscript ascribe to the following guidelines:
Finally, while questions of quality are of paramount importance to the inclusion of manuscripts for this special issue, given the nature of this special issue topic, alternative and innovative uses of JCT’s online formatting are encouraged. Questions pertaining to this call for manuscripts should be addressed to Walter S. Gershon, the guest editor for this special issue, via email at wgershon(at)kent.edu.
]]>Curriculum innovations occur within specific contexts and reflect the values associated with those contexts. Their impact and efficacy can only be assessed within the particular social, cultural, and political environments in which they occur. Educators around the world, especially those in countries experiencing large-scale, systemic political change, often look to the U.S. and other Western countries for new approaches to curriculum and instruction practices that reflect more open, democratic, and participatory educational systems. As a result, educators are often asked to work with their colleagues in ‘emerging democracies’ to help in developing new approaches to teaching and learning and to find ways of adapting practices to the conditions and circumstances in other countries. But what are the challenges of adapting educational practices across national and cultural borders? What assumptions do educators in other countries make about the nature of teaching and learning? In what ways does culture matter when applying curriculum theories and practices in diverse settings? And, how does the educational policy context influence the success of curriculum innovations? Answers to these questions vary according to the particular setting, the content and subject matter, and the policy and institutional contexts in which curriculum innovations are implemented. These questions also raise ethical dilemmas for curriculum workers when their efforts, whether intended or not, may be perceived as forms of ‘cultural imperialism’ as they advocate certain educational practices, theories, or philosophical stances.
The editors of this volume are seeking manuscripts to be included that address the issues confronted by curriculum workers as they navigate these dilemmas. These may take the form of case studies of curriculum development work in international contexts where specific ethical dilemmas have arisen, syntheses of multiple cases, empirical studies of international curriculum development and implementation, program evaluations that focus on the issues raised here, essays dealing with current theoretical perspectives on curriculum development in international contexts, or other appropriate writing that addresses the general theme of the proposed book. We anticipate that this volume will draw from a variety of research traditions including scholarship on ethics in international development (e.g. Kwame Anthony Appiah, Martha C. Nussbaum, John Rawls, and Amartya Sen, and Peter Singer), curriculum theory (e.g. John Dewey, William Pinar, Herbert Kliebard) citizenship education in global and multicultural contexts (e.g. James Banks, Walter Parker, Will Kymlicka).
If you are interested in submitting a manuscript for consideration please send a two-page précis to one of us by February 1st. In your précis be sure to be explicit about how your work is connected with the overall theme of the book as we have presented it above. Please feel free to contact either of us if you have questions.
Terrence C. Mason
Center for Social Studies and International Education
Indiana University – Bloomington
1900 E. 10th St., Bloomington, IN 47406 (812) 855-0172 (CSSIE)
tmason (at) indiana.edu
Robert J. Helfenbein
Curriculum and Instruction
Indiana University-IUPUI
902 W. New York St., ES 3126
Indianapolis, IN 46202
(317) 278-1408 /Â rhelfenb (at) iupui.edu
Feel free to add comments and help us name the folks in the photos and/or the sessions that are represented.
Thanks for coming!
See you next year!
]]>AMERICAN ASSOCIATION FOR THE
ADVANCEMENT OF CURRICULUM STUDIES
Ninth Annual Meeting
Tuesday, April 27- Friday, April 30, 2010
Doubletree Hotel, Denver, Colorado
Curriculum and the Cultural and Environmental Commons:
Local to Global//Global to Local
Our 2009 conference theme carries us into 2010, but with a new subtitle. Last year’s theme bore the subtitle “Towards Reclaiming, Restoring, and Reinventing.” Though we hardly exhausted the possibilities to which that subtitle points, our hope for the Denver conference is that we reconsider, but with a greater focus on the international scene.
Again, we might understand the commons, in general, as those material and cultural spaces that belong to everyone, upon which our survival depends, and which are not, or should not be, abandoned to the logics of private interests. For example, more tangible assets of the commons include vast resources such as oil, water, minerals, timber, that are on publicly owned lands, as well as broadcast airwaves, parks, and civic institutions. Less tangible commons include public education, nonprofit institutions, creative works and public knowledge that are paid for by public funds. All are essential to human survival or quality of life. Yet, these public resources are under persistent threat of enclosure as private interests steadily convert them into market resources.
The encroachment of private interests on a global scale into environmental commons such as water, energy, and agriculture, and into cultural knowledge and information commons threatens to overwhelm efforts toward global sustainability, equity, and peace. At a time when numerous expert analysts are predicting disastrous events from climate change in which millions will be displaced, the “end of oil,” massive water shortages, and more, international educational efforts toward sustainable futures could not be more pressing.
What sorts of curriculum work are needed to assist us in becoming the people we need to be in order to meet these challenges? How will we, as curriculum theorists, articulate and pedagogically address the challenges before us in their myriad local and global manifestations? How can we support each other in the work of conceptualizing the interpersonal, political, and spiritual dimensions of a sustainable future, one that expands the possibilities of peace and freedom for an ever greater number and fosters an ever broader and more sensitive attention to the resources and rhythms of our planet?
While presentations, performances, or installations that speak directly and clearly to this theme are desirable, we also recognize that the spirit of the theme points toward a broadly conceived and complicated conversation, not fettered by any assumptions—conscious or unconscious—embedded in the foregoing words. Any proposed contribution to the complicated conversation that creates meaningful curriculum study is welcomed and encouraged.
Conferences Committee,
Louise Allen, Chair
Peter Appelbaum, Program Chair
aaacs@arcadia.edu
Conference Site Co-Chairs:
Bruce Uhrmacher bruce.uhrmacher@du.edu & Bradley Conrad bconrad2@du.edu
University of Denver