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Queering Elementary Education: Advancing the Dialogue about Sexualities and Schooling [Kõva köide]

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Queering Elementary Education is not about teaching kids to be gay, lesbian, bisexual, or straight. Its not part of a sinister stratagem in the gay agenda. Instead, these provocative and thoughtful essays advocate the creation of classrooms that challenge categorical thinking, promote interpersonal intelligence, and foster critical consciousness. Queer elementary classrooms are those where parents and educators care enough about their children to trust the human capacity for understanding and their educative abilities to foster insight into the human condition. Those who teach queerly refuse to participate in the great sexual sorting machine called schooling where diminutive GI Joes and Barbies become star quarterbacks and prom queens, while the Linuses and Tinky Winkies become wallflowers or human doormats. Queeering education means bracketing our simplest classroom activities in which we routinely equate sexual identities with sexual acts, privilege the heterosexual condition, and presume sexual destinies. Queer teachers are those who develop curriculum and pedagogy that afford every child dignity rooted in self-worth and esteem for others. In short, queering education happens when we look at schooling upside down and view childhood from the inside out. This groundbreaking volume demands we explore taken-for-granted assumptions about diversity, identities, childhood, and prejudice.

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Provides an in-depth examination of the ways children's lives are hurt by homophobia and an inspiring array of strategies educators can use to turn this problem around. A must read for parents, educators, and administrators alike. -- Debra Chasnoff, Film Director, It's Elementary - Talking About Gay Issues in School This brilliant anthology is crucial reading for anyone committed to ensuring that our schools become physically and emotionally safer and more educationally relevant for students and staff of all sexual and gender identifications...Destined to become a classic, Queering Elementary Education offers a well-reasoned way out of the pedagogical and curricular restraints that have inhibited true liberatory education in our elementary schools. -- Warren J. Blumenfeld, Editor, Homophobia: How We All Pay the Price Editor, International Journal of Sexuality and Gender Studies This courageous collection of essays presents an articulate and passionate challenge to the repressive state apparatuses such as schools that professionally administer homophobia and reproduce state-sponsored heterosexism. Will Letts, Jim Sears and their contributors have provided educators with compelling arguments supporting gay and lesbian perspectives, multiculturalism, and gender and class equality. This volume marks the beginning of the queering of critical pedagogy and is long overdue. -- Peter McLaren, Honorary Chair Professor and Director of the Center for Critical Studies, Northeast Normal University, China These path-breaking essays are addressed to every present and future educator who would model honesty, civility, fairness, and respect for their students, colleagues and communities.... Provides readers with standards for achieving the kind of dignity that is rooted in self-worth and esteem for others and encourages us to imagine societies with more democratic space for all. This collection does all of this, and is also fun to read. -- Sandra Harding, Professor of Education in the Graduate School of Education and Info Studies, UCLA Queering Elementary Education is a ground-breaking book. Here we have, for the first time, a wide-ranging collection of articles on sexuality and elementary (or, in British terms, primary) schooling. Together and individually, the chapters of this book make a compelling case for Queering Elementary Education, to the benefit of all children in all their diversity. With sections on children, the curriculum, educators and families, the book offers a rich resource of teachers, student teachers and teacher educators and for anyone with an interest in sexuality, social justice and schooling. -- Deborah Epstein As an educator and gay parent, I found this collection fascinating and inspiring, to be widely read and widely taught. -- William F. Pinar, St. Bernard Parish Alumni Endowed Professor, Louisiana State University An important new anthology.... The articles in this book are arranged in just such a way that they offer us some very astute 'queer' observations while, almost simultaneously, providing us with very practical suggestions.... An incredible accomplishment. -- Glorianne M. Leck, Youngstown State University (From the Afterward) In this groundbreaking volume grounded to cutting edge scholarship that is plainly written, Will Letts and James Sears have pointed us down the path to a brighter tomorrow. Here they bring together a diverse range of writers who offer both theoretical constructs and practical advice to those who believe our schools should actively foster the values of justice. Queering Elementary Education gives us tools we need to move ahead. -- Kevin Jennings, Executive Director, Gay/Lesbian/Straight Education Network (From the Foreword) Queering Elementary Education is an important contribution to nourishing the ethical heart of teaching, reminding us how anemic and cold and partial our embrace of our students has too often been. For some readers this collection will be an affirmation, for others a surprise and challenge. But it is a book for all teachers and parents, indeed for anyone concerned with the healthy development of children and schools.





And, yes, it has an agenda: it stands straight and strong for fairness, for respect, for humanity, for simple decency. Jane Addams and the dauntless women of Hull House extended our sense of what childhood might be one hundred years ago. Addams asked: How shall we respond to the dreams of youth? This book is built around the same question, extending it in critical and powerful ways. -- William Ayers, educational theorist, author, and distinguished professor of education and senior university scholar at the University of Illinois at Chicago Probably no other title in the pantheon of liberationists literature will evoke more controversy than Queering Elementary Education.

Queering Elementary Education is the first carefully constructed work written for educators who are ever on the front lines in the worldwide struggle to eliminate prejudices born of societal ignorance.

This extraordinary book was conceived in the summer of 1997 when its editors envisioned what one of them, William J. Letts, IV called: 'a project that would take into account the lifeworlds of children, their families, their teachers, and their schools.' -- Jack Nichols * Gay Today * Queering Elementary Education is a must-read for all teachers and, perhaps more importantly, for preservice teachers. It is a smart, clearly written collection of essays exploring the complex interactions of class, race, gender, and sexual orientation. . . . Begins to map out some solutions to the homophobia in American schools. -- M. J. Carbone, Muhlenberg College * CHOICE *

Foreword ix Kevin Jennings Preface xiii James T. Sears Acknowledgments xv Matthews Lullaby xvii Perry Brass Part 1: Foundational Issues Teaching Queerly: Some Elementary Propositions 3(12) James T. Sears Why Discuss Sexuality in Elementary School? 15(12) Kathy Bickmore Pestalozzi, Perversity, and the Pedagogy of Love 27(12) Lisa Weems Part 2: Childrens Sexual and Social Development Stonewall in the Housekeeping Area: Gay and Lesbian Issues in the Early Childhood Classroom 39(10) Betsy J. Cahill Rachel Theilheimer Forbidden Fruit: Black Males Constructions of Transgressive Sexualities in Middle School 49(12) James Earl Davis Reading Queer Asian American Masculinities and Sexualities in Elementary School 61(10) Kevin K. Kumashiro ``My Moving Days: A Childs Negotiation of Multiple Lifeworlds in Relation to Gender, Ethnicity, and Sexuality 71(12) Maria Pallotta-Chiarolli What Happens When the Kids Grow Up? The Long-Term Impact of an Openly Gay Teacher on Eight Students Lives 83(14) Eric Rofes Part 3: Curriculum How to Make ``Boys and ``Girls in the Classroom: The Heteronormative Nature of Elementary-School Science 97(14) William J. Letts IV Using Music to Teach against Homophobia 111(14) Mara Sapon-Shevin Locating a Place for Gay and Lesbian Themes in Elementary Reading, Writing, and Talking 125(12) James R. King Jenifer Jasinski Schneider ``Its Okay to Be Gay: Interrupting Straight Thinking in the English Classroom 137(14) Wayne Martino How Teachers Understand Gay and Lesbian Content in the Elementary Social Studies Curriculum 151(14) Kevin P. Colleary Part 4: Family Children of the Future Age: Lesbian and Gay Parents Talk about School 165(12) Rita M. Kissen Love Makes a Family: Controversy in Two Massachusetts Towns 177(6) Gigi Kaeser Supporting Students/Responding to Gay and Lesbian Parents 183(12) Pat Hulsebosch Mari E. Korener Daniel P. Ryan Placing Children First: The Importance of Mutual Presence in the Elementary Classroom 195(12) Barbara Danish Part 5: Educators and Their Allies Activism Within: Working with Tension 207(10) Greg Curran Success Stories of a Fat, Biracial/Black, Jewish, Lesbian Assistant Principal 217(8) Karen Glasgow Sharon Murphy Lesbian Mother and Lesbian Educator: An Integrative View of Affirming Sexual Diversity 225(12) Rita M. Marinoble When Queer and Teacher Meet 237(10) Kate Evans Confronting Homophobia in a Multicultural Education Course 247(10) Margaret Mulhern Gregory Martinez Afterword 257(6) Glorianne M. Leck Annotated Bibliography of Resources 263(14) William J. Letts IV Index 277(10) About the Contributors 287
William J. Letts IV is a lecturer in science education at the Charles Sturt University, Bathurst, Australia. James T. Sears is an independent scholar. He is currently a visiting professor at the Harvard Graduate School of Education.