What Is and What Can Be: How a Liminal Position Can Change Learning and Teaching in Higher Education
Top Cited Papers
- 17 February 2011
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Anthropology & Education Quarterly
- Vol. 42 (1) , 37-53
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1548-1492.2010.01109.x
Abstract
No abstract availableKeywords
This publication has 31 references indexed in Scilit:
- Making Spaces to LearnCurriculum Inquiry, 2010
- From traditional accountability to shared responsibility: the benefits and challenges of student consultants gathering midcourse feedback in college classroomsAssessment & Evaluation in Higher Education, 2009
- 'What you get is looking in a mirror, only better': inviting students to reflect (on) college teachingReflective Practice, 2008
- Resisting the Impositional Potential of Student Voice Work: Lessons for liberatory educational research from poststructuralist feminist critiques of critical pedagogyDiscourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 2007
- Sound, Presence, and Power: “Student Voice” in Educational Research and ReformCurriculum Inquiry, 2006
- Newly Betwixt and Between: Revising Liminality in the Context of a Teacher Preparation ProgramAnthropology & Education Quarterly, 2006
- Authorizing Students’ Perspectives: Toward Trust, Dialogue, and Change in EducationEducational Researcher, 2002
- Unrolling Roles in Techno-Pedagogy: Toward New Forms of Collaboration in Traditional College SettingsInnovative Higher Education, 2001
- Urban Students, Liminality, and the Postindustrial ContextSociology of Education, 1996
- Betwixt and Between: Academic Women in TransitionCanadian Journal of Higher Education, 1969