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College of Education and Human Development Curriculum and Instruction

College of Education 
    and Human Development Curriculum and Instruction
125 Peik Hall - 159 Pillsbury Dr. SE - Minneapolis, MN 55455 USA
Tel: 612-625-4006 - Fax: 612-624-8277

Culture and teaching

Culture and Teaching session
Culture and Teaching session

Culture and teaching (CAT) engages the study of a variety of social and cultural interactions that shape teaching and learning in formal and informal settings. The track encourages interdisciplinarity as a habit of mind. The cultural study of teaching foregrounds important connections between experiences and practices in homes, communities, schools, and classrooms. The cultural study of teaching also seeks to understand how educators’ and learners’ identities and experiences profoundly impact teaching, learning, and learning to teach. Scholarship in the cultural study of teaching and learning, teacher education, and urban education is at the cutting edge of educational research. Faculty members in the CAT track are dedicated to issues pertaining to equity and social justice in both research and teaching. The track focuses on theory, practice, and the nexus of the two.

Degree program information in culture and teaching

Ph.D.: for experienced professionals who want to develop advanced research, knowledge, and leadership skills in their chosen field

Faculty

Timothy J. Lensmire
Tim’s teaching, research, and writing are animated by commitments to and hopes for radical democracy. His past research focused on the teaching of writing in schools. Drawing on Mikhail Bakhtin and John Dewey, among others, he criticized and reconstructed traditional and progressive conceptions of the teacher's role, student voice, and community in the writing classroom. His current research and writing are grounded in critical white studies and focused on an ethnographic interview study he completed recently in a small rural community. The goal of this work is to build descriptions of, and theoretical insights about, the racial identities of white people, as part of a larger pedagogical and political project concerned with race and social change.

Bic Ngo
Bic’s research examines how and why schools and classrooms advantage some groups over others, as well as the ways schools and classrooms are critical sites for social and cultural transformation. She employs ethnographic methodology and engages critical, cultural and feminist theories to explore the implications of globalization and immigration for teaching, learning and curriculum. Her work has explored issues of culture and inequality in the education of Hmong American and Lao American students and families. Currently, her research seeks to explicate the impact of culture change on Hmong students' education, and the implications for how we theorize immigrant identity and anti-oppressive education.

Mistilina Sato
Misty’s research seeks to better understand the ways in which teachers, as people and as professionals, engage in processes of developing their practice, leadership, personal and professional identities, and their collegial relationships and communities. The theoretical lens she brings to her research is one of practical reasoning. Practical reasoning recognizes the intellectual process of taking everyday action through a process of deliberation, foregrounds the local and timely nature of action, and emphasizes the personal identity of the teacher. Recent studies have focused on teacher leadership and the teacher change process, specifically in the context of science education, National Board Certification, and everyday or formative assessment integrated in the teachers’ instructional practice.

Thom Swiss
Thom’s writing and teaching focus on popular culture in general and digital media, creative writing, and popular music in particular. Drawing on research practices in cultural and media studies, he’s interested in the contexts in which writing takes place and the possibilities for new literacies that are emerging from new technologies. His courses typically include texts from a range of disciplines and perspectives. Thom joined the education faculty in 2006. Previously he taught at the University of Iowa and as professor of mass communication at the University of Minnesota.

Student profile

Louise Covert and Bic

 Louise Covert and Bic

Louise Covert and Bic

Louise Covert

I taught English/language arts for 15 years, and I earned National Board Certification in Early Adolescent/English Language Arts in 1999. Since that time, I have worked an adjunct faculty member at Saint Mary’s University and the coordinator for Education Minnesota’s statewide electronic mentoring program for novice teachers. In 2004, I decided return to graduate school at the University of Minnesota.

In the first two years of the Ph.D. program, the course work expanded my understanding of the historical and sociological influences on education in the United States. This deepened my interest in learning more about teacher identity and development and communities of practice.

The culture and teaching program’s emphasis on social justice inspired me to learn more about critical pedagogy and cultural competency in teaching. My research interests include teacher identity and development, and critical white studies.

Publications

Peckover, R., Peterson, S., Christiansen, P., and Covert, L. (2006, Summer). Constructivist pathway to teacher leadership. Academic Exchange Quarterly, (10) 2, 136-140.

Presentations

National Staff Development Council Annual Summer Conference 2005 Teachers, Leadership, and Learning Session Presenter: Connect and Support with eMentoring

New Teacher Center, University of California, Santa Cruz Annual Conference 2004: Quality Mentoring Session Presenter: Connect and Support with eMentoring

AERA 2004: Constructivism Research 2 Co-presenter of paper: Facilitating Development of Constructivist Teacher Leadership: Transforming Teacher Understanding of Self as Inquirer and Collaborator

AERA 2003: Working within Systems: Self-study of Innovative Practice (A Dialogue). Co-presenter of paper: Self-Study: A Conversational Path to Shared Program Accountability.

Revised November 2006

 
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Last modified on August 06, 2008