Review: Controversy in the Classroom. The Democratic Power of Discussion

“One warm day in the spring of 2006, I visited a U.S. History class at a public charter school in a large Midwestern city …” (p. 1) This is the beginning of Diana Hess’ book about the methods of democratic discussion in classroom and it indicates its strong narrative quality including several teache...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Tilman Grammes
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Bielefeld University 2010-11-01
Series:Journal of Social Science Education
Online Access:http://www.jsse.org/2010/2010-3/pdf/Hess-JSSE-3-2010.pdf
id doaj-cbb5c0070f544179810b0e09a6e13bab
record_format Article
spelling doaj-cbb5c0070f544179810b0e09a6e13bab2020-11-25T02:46:52ZdeuBielefeld UniversityJournal of Social Science Education1611-96651618-52932010-11-0193105107Review: Controversy in the Classroom. The Democratic Power of DiscussionTilman Grammes“One warm day in the spring of 2006, I visited a U.S. History class at a public charter school in a large Midwestern city …” (p. 1) This is the beginning of Diana Hess’ book about the methods of democratic discussion in classroom and it indicates its strong narrative quality including several teacher portraits and scenic vignettes. The book is winner of the 2009 “Exemplary Research in Social Studies” award from the National Council for the Social Studies. In an interview with Kerry G. Hill for the campus journal (School of Education, University of Wisconsin http://campusconnections.education.wisc.edu/post/LEARNING-Diana-Hess.aspx) the author roots the book’s content back to her own biography and socialization: While growing up in northern Illinois, Diana Hess recalls members of her family engaging in lively, raucous political discussions. “Disagreement wasn’t a negative thing,” she remembers.http://www.jsse.org/2010/2010-3/pdf/Hess-JSSE-3-2010.pdf
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tilman Grammes
spellingShingle Tilman Grammes
Review: Controversy in the Classroom. The Democratic Power of Discussion
Journal of Social Science Education
author_facet Tilman Grammes
author_sort Tilman Grammes
title Review: Controversy in the Classroom. The Democratic Power of Discussion
title_short Review: Controversy in the Classroom. The Democratic Power of Discussion
title_full Review: Controversy in the Classroom. The Democratic Power of Discussion
title_fullStr Review: Controversy in the Classroom. The Democratic Power of Discussion
title_full_unstemmed Review: Controversy in the Classroom. The Democratic Power of Discussion
title_sort review: controversy in the classroom. the democratic power of discussion
publisher Bielefeld University
series Journal of Social Science Education
issn 1611-9665
1618-5293
publishDate 2010-11-01
description “One warm day in the spring of 2006, I visited a U.S. History class at a public charter school in a large Midwestern city …” (p. 1) This is the beginning of Diana Hess’ book about the methods of democratic discussion in classroom and it indicates its strong narrative quality including several teacher portraits and scenic vignettes. The book is winner of the 2009 “Exemplary Research in Social Studies” award from the National Council for the Social Studies. In an interview with Kerry G. Hill for the campus journal (School of Education, University of Wisconsin http://campusconnections.education.wisc.edu/post/LEARNING-Diana-Hess.aspx) the author roots the book’s content back to her own biography and socialization: While growing up in northern Illinois, Diana Hess recalls members of her family engaging in lively, raucous political discussions. “Disagreement wasn’t a negative thing,” she remembers.
url http://www.jsse.org/2010/2010-3/pdf/Hess-JSSE-3-2010.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT tilmangrammes reviewcontroversyintheclassroomthedemocraticpowerofdiscussion
_version_ 1724756270209040384