ABSTRACT

Responding to the linguistic and cultural diversity of the U.S. K–12 student population and an increasing emphasis on STEM, this book offers a model for professional development that engages teachers in transformative action research projects and explicitly links literacy to mathematics and science curriculum through sociocultural principles. Providing detailed and meaningful demonstrations of participatory action research in the classroom, Razfar and Troiano present an effective, systemic approach that helps preservice teachers support students’ funds of knowledge. By featuring teacher and researcher narratives, this book centers teacher expertise and offers a more holistic and humanistic understanding of authentic and empathetic teaching. Focusing on integrating instructional knowledge from ESL, bilingual, and STEM education, the range of cases and examples will allow readers to implement action research projects in their own classrooms. Chapters include discussion questions and additional resources for students, researchers, and educators.

chapter 3|18 pages

Community Renewable Energy

Designing Solar Panels Through Science-Funds of Knowledge

chapter 5|22 pages

From IRE to Conversational

Shifting Classroom Discourse Through Community-Based Forensics Expertise

chapter 6|24 pages

From Weslandia to Urban Gardening

Shifting Teacher Language Ideologies Through Ecological Science and Third Space

chapter 7|16 pages

Sustaining Teaching Excellence and Professional Identity Across Time and Space

From Reporting to Sharing

chapter 8|22 pages

Breaking the Fourth Wall

Rebuilding University and School Partnerships Through Action Research

chapter |2 pages

Epilogue