Using a philosopher’s pedagogy to teach school subjects: The case of Ethnic Studies at Kailua High School
This article examines the impact of using a philosopher’s pedagogy to teach school subjects (Lewis & Sutcliffe 2017) through the case study of Ethnic Studies at Kailua High School. Conducted in a multicultural setting, the participants in the study are 89 high school students and data comes from...
Main Author: | |
---|---|
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
University of Birmingham Library Services
2017-05-01
|
Series: | Journal of Philosophy in Schools |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | https://jps.bham.ac.uk/articles/65 |
id |
doaj-8f60220874344e19a81d92dc3dddfcc0 |
---|---|
record_format |
Article |
spelling |
doaj-8f60220874344e19a81d92dc3dddfcc02021-04-02T18:54:01ZengUniversity of Birmingham Library ServicesJournal of Philosophy in Schools2204-24822017-05-014142610.21913/jps.v4i1.141765Using a philosopher’s pedagogy to teach school subjects: The case of Ethnic Studies at Kailua High SchoolAmber Strong Makaiau0University of Hawai‘i at MānoaThis article examines the impact of using a philosopher’s pedagogy to teach school subjects (Lewis & Sutcliffe 2017) through the case study of Ethnic Studies at Kailua High School. Conducted in a multicultural setting, the participants in the study are 89 high school students and data comes from their course assignments. A constructivist approach to grounded theory methods is used to analyse data. Findings reveal how two facets of the philosopher’s pedagogy helped engage students and positively impact their personal and academic development. They are: (1) the seven-part inquiry process and (2) the community of inquiry. In the article’s conclusion, using the philosopher’s pedagogy to teach Ethnic Studies is presented as an important means for developing student engagement and carrying out the aims of multicultural, culturally responsive, and social justice approaches to schooling.https://jps.bham.ac.uk/articles/65community of inquiryculturally responsive teachingethnic studiesmulticultural educationphilosophy for childrensocial justice education |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Amber Strong Makaiau |
spellingShingle |
Amber Strong Makaiau Using a philosopher’s pedagogy to teach school subjects: The case of Ethnic Studies at Kailua High School Journal of Philosophy in Schools community of inquiry culturally responsive teaching ethnic studies multicultural education philosophy for children social justice education |
author_facet |
Amber Strong Makaiau |
author_sort |
Amber Strong Makaiau |
title |
Using a philosopher’s pedagogy to teach school subjects: The case of Ethnic Studies at Kailua High School |
title_short |
Using a philosopher’s pedagogy to teach school subjects: The case of Ethnic Studies at Kailua High School |
title_full |
Using a philosopher’s pedagogy to teach school subjects: The case of Ethnic Studies at Kailua High School |
title_fullStr |
Using a philosopher’s pedagogy to teach school subjects: The case of Ethnic Studies at Kailua High School |
title_full_unstemmed |
Using a philosopher’s pedagogy to teach school subjects: The case of Ethnic Studies at Kailua High School |
title_sort |
using a philosopher’s pedagogy to teach school subjects: the case of ethnic studies at kailua high school |
publisher |
University of Birmingham Library Services |
series |
Journal of Philosophy in Schools |
issn |
2204-2482 |
publishDate |
2017-05-01 |
description |
This article examines the impact of using a philosopher’s pedagogy to teach school subjects (Lewis & Sutcliffe 2017) through the case study of Ethnic Studies at Kailua High School. Conducted in a multicultural setting, the participants in the study are 89 high school students and data comes from their course assignments. A constructivist approach to grounded theory methods is used to analyse data. Findings reveal how two facets of the philosopher’s pedagogy helped engage students and positively impact their personal and academic development. They are: (1) the seven-part inquiry process and (2) the community of inquiry. In the article’s conclusion, using the philosopher’s pedagogy to teach Ethnic Studies is presented as an important means for developing student engagement and carrying out the aims of multicultural, culturally responsive, and social justice approaches to schooling. |
topic |
community of inquiry culturally responsive teaching ethnic studies multicultural education philosophy for children social justice education |
url |
https://jps.bham.ac.uk/articles/65 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT amberstrongmakaiau usingaphilosopherspedagogytoteachschoolsubjectsthecaseofethnicstudiesatkailuahighschool |
_version_ |
1721550687046729728 |