Teachers' Pedagogical Resistance to Prescribed Curriculum
<p> Research indicates that teachers feel intimidated into fully implementing prescribed literacy curriculum at the expense of their own praxis which may indeed be effective in boosting student literacy achievement. This perceived intimidation may serve to compromise students’ litera...
Main Author: | Owens, Darya |
---|---|
Language: | EN |
Published: |
Wayne State University
2017
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10599931 |
Similar Items
-
A Critical Analysis of Sexuality Education in the United States| Toward an Inclusive Curriculum for Social Justice
by: Kocsis, Tiffani
Published: (2017) -
Teacher Perceptions of Their Curricular and Pedagogical Shifts: Outcomes of a Project-Based Model of Teacher Professional Development in the Next Generation Science Standards
by: David J. Shernoff, et al.
Published: (2017-06-01) -
Teachers' perceptions of social skills instruction for children with autism spectrum disorders
by: Camaya, Claribel
Published: (2016) -
Prospective Teachers Dismantling Anti-Bilingual Hegemonic Discourses| Exploring a Pedagogy of Participatory Possibilities for "Political Clarity" and "Political Agency"
by: Barbosa, Perla De Oliveira
Published: (2018) -
Teacher Narratives of Resistance: Maintaining Professional Autonomy within the (Curriculum and) Pedagogy of High-Stakes Testing
by: Haerr, Catherine
Published: (2012)