[align=left]Shiraz Thobani, "Islam in the School Curriculum: Symbolic Pedagogy and Cultural Claims"
Publisher: Continuum | 2010 | ISBN: 1441100075 | PDF | 288 pages | 1.3 MB
This is a sociological study of the recontextualisation of Islam as school knowledge in the UK education system. "Islam in the School Curriculum" explores the conceptualisation of school-based Islam on two levels: as a symbolic category in English religious education as a consequence of policy shifts, and as pedagogic discourse at the local community level in state and Muslim schools. Using recontextualisation theory, the author examines the relations between educational governance, social interests and cultural epistemology as they pertain specifically to symbolic constructs. In the aftermath of September 11 2001, the teaching of Islam has assumed geopolitical significance, coming under close scrutiny internationally. Much of this attention has been directed at madrasas in Muslim countries, yet Islam in schooling contexts in the West has remained a blind-spot. In the UK, heightened anxieties about 'homegrown' terrorists point to the need for a better understanding of Islam in both state and faith schools. Shiraz Thobani explores the role played by national and local policies and pedagogic practices in the production of school-based Islam in a secular, liberal context and makes an important contribution to the sociology of the curriculum and the study of religious education.
Reviews
http://depositfiles.com/files/0dkp92r19[/align]
Publisher: Continuum | 2010 | ISBN: 1441100075 | PDF | 288 pages | 1.3 MB
This is a sociological study of the recontextualisation of Islam as school knowledge in the UK education system. "Islam in the School Curriculum" explores the conceptualisation of school-based Islam on two levels: as a symbolic category in English religious education as a consequence of policy shifts, and as pedagogic discourse at the local community level in state and Muslim schools. Using recontextualisation theory, the author examines the relations between educational governance, social interests and cultural epistemology as they pertain specifically to symbolic constructs. In the aftermath of September 11 2001, the teaching of Islam has assumed geopolitical significance, coming under close scrutiny internationally. Much of this attention has been directed at madrasas in Muslim countries, yet Islam in schooling contexts in the West has remained a blind-spot. In the UK, heightened anxieties about 'homegrown' terrorists point to the need for a better understanding of Islam in both state and faith schools. Shiraz Thobani explores the role played by national and local policies and pedagogic practices in the production of school-based Islam in a secular, liberal context and makes an important contribution to the sociology of the curriculum and the study of religious education.
Reviews
‘This is a timely and very important contribution to an under-researched area. In presenting a sociological analysis of Islam as school knowledge in the educational system of England, including the post-September 11 period, it provides a comprehensive, interesting and accessible text that deserves a wide readership.’
Kay Haw, Principal Research Fellow, University of Nottingham, UK
,Kay Haw, Principal Research Fellow, University of Nottingham, UK
‘A timely book that deals with a contested field.’
Gerdien Jonker, Georg Eckert Instituted for International Textbook Research, Braunschweig, Germany
,Gerdien Jonker, Georg Eckert Instituted for International Textbook Research, Braunschweig, Germany
http://depositfiles.com/files/0dkp92r19[/align]
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