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Frederick M. Hess's BlogUnderstanding Complex Ecologies... of the What Now?
by Frederick M. Hess • Apr 5, 2010 at 9:00 am http://www.frederickhess.org/2010/04/understanding-complex-ecologies-of-the-what-now It's April, and I was just starting to muse on the approaching AERA annual conference when a wonderful note arrived reminding me that the theme of this year's AERA meeting is "Understanding Complex Ecologies in a Changing World" (nope, I don't have any idea what that means either). The note announced a series of working groups to explore this topic. Personally, I'm hopeful one group will focus on explaining what the hell the theme means. Anyway, as a public service message to readers who will be in Denver for AERA (and because it's kind of amusing for everyone else), I thought I'd share the list of working groups. I was going to have some fun with this but, honestly, I'm not sure I can improve upon a simple listing of the groups. The thing that strikes me is that the groups whose titles make sense all seem to deal with race, gender, ethnicity, immigration, and diversity, while the others might as well be titled in Aramaic. What I can't tell is whether indecipherable titles mean that fluency in the relevant jargon is the price of entry, whether participants are trying to dress up the fact that they're not sure what they're talking about either, or whether the folks picking the titles are trying to hide the embarrassing fact that they're not talking race and gender. Hard to say, really. Anyway, here you go: The Use of Epidemiological Methods in the Study of Educational Inequality What Neuroscience Tells Us About Complex Ecologies of Learning Ecological Influences on Health and Implications for Education and Learning Complex Systems in the Study of Ecologies of Learning The Implications of Language Variation for Learning Within Complex Social Ecologies Identity, Ethnicity, and Race in Learning Gender Identity and Sexual Orientation Influences in Complex Social Ecologies of Learning The Role of Indigenous Knowledge Systems in the Education of American Indians Immigration and Opportunity to Learn Teacher Knowledge and Student Diversity Examining Cultural Influences on Learning and Development Across Multiple Levels of Context Use of Mixed Methods to Study Complex Ecological Questions of Learning and Development Ecological Influences on Risk and Resilience in Human Learning and Development The Impact of Educational Policies on Teaching and Learning Chairs: Clifton Tanabe, University of Hawaii - Manoa and David Kupferman, University of Hawaii - Manoa receive the latest by email: subscribe to frederick m. hess's free mailing list |
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