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Inquiry in Tandem explores how engaging in teacher and student inquiry simultaneously impacts teacher practice and student learning in powerful ways. With a focus on secondary schools and all content areas we encourage inquiry because it is good practice. Teachers and students are active doers and thinkers who ask questions, seek information, and develop thoughtful responses. This book presents a model of professional development that fosters this type of deep learning by teachers and students.

Produktbeschreibung
Inquiry in Tandem explores how engaging in teacher and student inquiry simultaneously impacts teacher practice and student learning in powerful ways. With a focus on secondary schools and all content areas we encourage inquiry because it is good practice. Teachers and students are active doers and thinkers who ask questions, seek information, and develop thoughtful responses. This book presents a model of professional development that fosters this type of deep learning by teachers and students.
Autorenporträt
Christine D. Clayton (Ed.D., Teachers College, Columbia University) is Associate Professor of Education at Pace University in Pleasantville, New York. She utilized inquiry as a high school history teacher and then engaged in collaborative inquiry with in-service and pre-service teachers through professional development. James F. Kilbane, Jr. (Ph.D., Indiana University) is Clinical Associate Professor of STEM Education at Cleveland State University. He began using inquiry as a middle school teacher. He has deepened his understanding by helping practicing teachers and pre-service teachers inquire for themselves and with their students.
Rezensionen
"While a plethora of publications exist that discuss inquiry as a mechanism for teacher professional development and inquiry as a pedagogical approach to teaching, Inquiry in Tandem: Student and Teacher Learning in Secondary Schools is the first to give equal treatment to both of these topics within a single text. As such, Clayton and Kilbane illustrate the dynamic interplay that can occur when teachers use inquiry both as a tool to learn from their own teaching practice as well as a pedagogical approach to shape that practice, offering fresh perspectives and new insights on the enduring process of inquiry."-Nancy Fichtman Dana, Professor, School of Teaching and Learning, University of Florida