1st Edition

Education After 9/11 A Special Issue of educational Studies

Edited By Rebecca A. Martusewicz Copyright 2003
    128 Pages
    by Routledge

    This special issue is a testimony to the intensity of the events of September 11, 2001 and how they have touched, moved, and shaken everyone, both in ways that people have been struggling to grapple with and ways that they cannot even be aware of. The essays in this special issue include:
    *an article that Wendy Kohli delivered as her America Educational Studies Association Presidential address in the Fall of 2001 just weeks after the events of September 11;
    *an analysie of the relationship of global corporate interests and the subsequent impact on the community of life that the war on terrorism brings to light;
    *a sweeping and in-depth lesson on the cultural and political contexts of the various countries involved and what we need to know to teach about these events in those contexts;
    *an account of the aesthetic power of poetry to help us reckon with our new world; and
    *a collection of reflective works on what Social Foundations professors and their students went through in the aftermath of the attacks, how their courses have both contributed to their students' (and their own) abilities to understand this current context, as well as how these courses have been reshaped.

    Volume 33, Number 3, 2002. Contents: W. Kohli, 2000 American Educational Association Presidential Address. Situated Knowing: Mind, Body and Soul. B. Griffen, "Our World Will Never Be The Same". M. Ginsberg, N. Megahed, What Should We Tell Educators About Terrorism and Islam? Some Considerations in the Global Context after September 11, 2001. D.A. Breault, Brutal Compassion: A Requiem. J. Hutchinson, THE SOCIAL FOUNDATIONS CLASSROOM, Cracks in the Mirror: Education in a Fractured World. A.N. McKnight, Trauma of September Eleventh. A. O'Conor, Wake of September 11. C. Knaus, POETRY, Perhaps Wed Should Actually Talk.

    Biography

    Rebecca A. Martusewicz