Editors:
- Addresses the needs and demands for quality teaching in rural and remote areas
- Highlights challenges and opportunities for teaching and teacher education in rural contexts with research from the field
- Contributes to rural educational contexts by promoting a more connected and relational vision of what it means to teach well in rural areas
- Addresses emerging and potential connections between rural and Indigenous education
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Table of contents (16 chapters)
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Front Matter
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Why Rural Matters in Education
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Front Matter
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The Rural Education Landscape in Canada
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Front Matter
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Rural Identity and Relationality
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Front Matter
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Place-Based and Land-Based Pedagogies
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Front Matter
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Conclusion
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Front Matter
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About this book
This book examines challenges associated with the education of teachers in and for rural places. It offers a new perspective with respect to how Canadian educators are shifting the conversation toward a hopeful discourse concerning how educators can foster meaningful rural learning environments, which will contribute to building stronger rural communities and regions. A central focus of the book is emerging reconceptualization of education, place and indigeneity in Canadian education in the wake of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission
Though the challenge of addressing rural teaching and learning lies partly in the nuances and complexities of unique places, there are also common threads that affect virtually all communities in rural, regional and remote educational, cultural, economic, and social geographies. Chapters in this collection provide current research in Canadian rural education including examples and stories from the field – contributed by teachers, administrators, and superintendents – on the challenges and creative opportunities that they have discovered in their own rural context, giving hope and inspiration for what is possible.
The book will appeal to all readers interested in rural education and teacher education, as well as to those concerned with educational inequality and indigenous education.
Keywords
- meaningful rural learning environments
- rural education in Canada
- remote education in Canada
- teacher education programs in Canada
- teacher education programs for rural places
- Indigenous communities and education
- challenges of teacher education in rural places
- quality teaching in rural and remote areas
- spatial educational inequality
- learning and instruction
Reviews
“This book transcends the Canadian context and provides many valuable lessons, questions and challenges to rural scholars and educators around the globe. … to sum up this collection of sixteen chapters, as diverse, complex and rich, was a real challenge; to read it, was exciting and a pleasure.” (Hernan Cuervo, Australian and International Journal of Rural Education, Vol. 31 (1), 2021)
Editors and Affiliations
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School of Education, Acadia University, Wolfville, Canada
Michael Corbett
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Werklund School of Education, University of Calgary, Calgary, Canada
Dianne Gereluk
About the editors
Michael Corbett is Professor of Education at Acadia University and Adjunct Professor of Rural and Remote Education in the Faculty of Education, University of Tasmania. Professor Corbett has studied rural outmigration, youth educational decision-making, the politics of educational assessment, literacies in rural contexts, improvisation and the arts in education, the position of rural identities and experience in education, conceptions of space, place, and mobilities, the viability of small rural schools, “wicked” policy problems and controversies in education, and the use of film and video as a literate medium in schools.
Dianne Gereluk is Dean and Professor of Education at the Werklund School of Education, University of Calgary. Her areas of expertise include philosophy of education, policy analysis, and political philosophy. She sits on provincial advisory committees for the province and is a regular commentator on current policy debates in education. Her recent work builds upon issues of equity and access for children and is specifically focused on reducing systemic educational barriers for individuals who live in rural and remote areas of Canada.
Bibliographic Information
Book Title: Rural Teacher Education
Book Subtitle: Connecting Land and People
Editors: Michael Corbett, Dianne Gereluk
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-15-2560-5
Publisher: Springer Singapore
eBook Packages: Education, Education (R0)
Copyright Information: Springer Nature Singapore Pte Ltd. 2020
Hardcover ISBN: 978-981-15-2559-9Published: 16 February 2020
Softcover ISBN: 978-981-15-2562-9Published: 16 February 2021
eBook ISBN: 978-981-15-2560-5Published: 15 February 2020
Edition Number: 1
Number of Pages: XVII, 328
Number of Illustrations: 3 b/w illustrations, 49 illustrations in colour
Topics: Teaching and Teacher Education, Sociology of Education, Learning & Instruction, Professional & Vocational Education