AAACS 2016 conference

American Association for the Advancement of Curriculum Studies: An Ethics of Historical Engagement
Tuesday, 5 April – Friday, 8 April 2016

Priority Deadline: Sunday December 13th
Cut-off for Submissions: Sunday January 10th

Recent conference themes of the American Association for the Advancement of Curriculum Studies have focused on “Counter-western curriculum theory,” “Communities of Dissensus/Engaged Generosity,” and “Alter-global Dispossession and the Politics of Recognition.” As we look back on the conversations engendered by these concerns and forward to the future of our field, we can take pride in the internationalization that we have initiated, and the emphasis on ethics encouraged by our interest in dissensus, generosity, dispossession, and recognition. Despite these advancements, the marginalization and downsizing of curriculum studies continues within historical conditions that suggest on-going international crises and related paralyses.

How are we confronting and working through cataclysmic climate change, global refugee crises, epistemic violence of racism and other forms of oppression? When we look back on curriculum history before “The Reconceptualization,” specifically to the period of “Curriculum and Objectives,” we find a field defined by its fantasies of social control and curriculum management; after the reconceptualization we find a utopian yet sidelined field enshrining scholars’ ever newer “perspectives” and their (albeit limited) “proliferations” in a waning next moment.  At this juncture, we ask: How might an emphasis on curriculum history – an historical reaching backward to move forward – frame our praxis as curriculum scholars to rekindle our commitments to colleges of education,  preservice and professional teachers, and students – children and adults – seeking knowledge and understanding in schools, museums, NGOs, and other educational venues?

How do we read our history, particularly in ethical terms? How do we understand our history as informing our present and near future projects from within a strong, historically-informed, ethical sensibility? History often tells us much about how we are constructed, our fantasies of ourselves, and our desired futures.  This year, we welcome as always proposals on any current scholarship, and embrace provocative and surprising conference formats; and let us together confront why we sometimes avoid our shortcomings as a field, and work together to heal ourselves and our communities even as we try to heal the earth – and hear, too, the summons of our predecessors to continue intellectual work in education.

Conference and Program Committee:
Jim Jupp, Chair
Associate Professor of Curriculum & Pedagogy
Georgia Southern University
jcjupp@georgiasouthern.edu

Conference Site Co-Chair:
Brian Casemore
Associate Professor of Curriculum & Pedagogy
George Washington University

Proposals are being accepted through January 10th
AAACS 2016 Proposal Guide
Follow the link: http://goo.gl/forms/QwnPEqVpcE
Your proposal automatically registers you as a member of AAACS—there are no dues. With membership in AAACS (http://www.aaacs-conference.org/  ) comes membership in the International Association for the Advancement of Curriculum Studies.

 

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