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Learning Legacies: Archive to Action through Women's Cross-Cultural Teaching

by Sarah Ruffing Robbins

University of Michigan Press, 2017

ISBNs

Cloth: 978-0-472-07351-1

eISBN: 978-0-472-90070-1

Paper: 978-0-472-05351-3

About the Book
Learning Legacies explores the history of cross-cultural teaching approaches, to highlight how women writer-educators used stories about their collaborations to promote community-building. Robbins demonstrates how educators used stories that resisted dominant conventions and expectations about learners to navigate cultural differences. Using case studies of educational initiatives on behalf of African American women, Native American children, and the urban poor, Learning Legacies promotes the importance of knowledge grounded in the histories and cultures of the many racial and ethnic groups that have always comprised America’s populace, underscoring the value of rich cultural knowledge in pedagogy by illustrating how creative teachers still draw on these learning legacies today.

About the Author
Sarah Ruffing Robbins is a Lorraine Sherley Professor of Literature at Texas Christian University.

Reviews
“Robbins pushes the envelope on the normative uses and perspectives about the Archive, using literal archives of educational practice recorded in counter-narratives from the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Educators will find value in using this book to help train emerging teachers to be reflective about their practice and for models of how to use texts, archives, and stories as powerful teaching tools . . . ”
—Timothy K. Eatman, Associate Professor of Higher Education, Syracuse University, Faculty Co-director Imagining America: Artists and Scholars in Public Life
 
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“[Learning Legacies] combines knowledge about teacher training and the history of education in the United States gained from extensive research into many formal archives, numerous site visits, and interviews with educators, archivists and others.  Robbins’s own autoethnographic reflections also form a crucial and welcome element of her research.”
—Sandra A. Zagarell, Donald R. Longman Professor of English at Oberlin College and scholar of American Literature and Culture

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Tags
The New Public Scholarship, Culturally relevant pedagogy, Education, American, Literary Criticism, United States, History
Open Access Information

License: CC BY-NC-ND