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63Jean‐Jacques Rousseau, the Mechanised Clock and Children's TimeJournal of Philosophy of Education 51 (4): 837-849. 2017.This article explores a perplexing line from Rousseau's Emile: his suggestion that the ‘most important rule’ for the educator is ‘not to gain time but to lose it’. An analysis of what Rousseau meant by this line, the article argues, shows that Rousseau provides the philosophical groundwork for a radical critique of the contemporary cultural framework that supports homework, standardised testing, and the competitive extracurricular activities that consume children's time. He offers important insi…Read more
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64Theorizing Gun Violence in Schools: Philosophy, Not Silver BulletsEducational Theory 65 (4): 363-369. 2015.
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65Consider Your Man Card Reissued: Masculine Honor and Gun ViolenceEducational Theory 65 (4): 387-403. 2015.In this article, Amy Shuffelton addresses school shootings through an investigation of honor and masculinity. Drawing on recent scholarship on honor, including Bernard Williams's Shame and Necessity and Kwame Anthony Appiah's The Honor Code, Shuffelton points out that honor has been misconstrued as exclusively a matter of hierarchical, competitive relationships. A second kind of honor, which exists within relationships of mutual respect between equals, she suggests, merits theorists' further con…Read more
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62‘New Fatherhood’ and the Politics of DependencyJournal of Philosophy of Education 48 (2): 216-230. 2014.Although ‘new fatherhood’ promises a reconstruction of the domesticity paradigm that positions fathers as breadwinners and mothers as caretakers, it maintains the notion that families are self-supporting entities and thereby neglects the extensive interdependence involved in raising children. As a result, it cannot successfully overturn this paradigm and hampers our ability to reimagine relationships along lines that would better serve parents' and children's wellbeing. This article raises these…Read more
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110Estranged Familiars: A Deweyan Approach to Philosophy and Qualitative ResearchStudies in Philosophy and Education 34 (2): 137-147. 2015.This essay argues that philosophy can be combined with qualitative research without sacrificing the aims of either approach. Philosophers and qualitative researchers have articulated and supported the idea that human meaning-constructions are appropriately grasped through close attention to “consequences incurred in action,” in Dewey’s words. Furthermore, scholarship in both domains explores alternative possibilities to familiar constructions of meaning. The essay explains by means of a concrete…Read more
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89Parental Involvement and Public Schools: Disappearing Mothers in Labor and PoliticsStudies in Philosophy and Education 36 (1): 21-32. 2016.In this article, I argue that the material and rhetorical connection between “parental involvement” and motherhood has the effect of making two important features of parental involvement disappear. Both of these features need to be taken into account to think through the positive and negative effects of parental involvement in public schooling. First, parental involvement is labor. In the following section of this paper, I discuss the work of feminist scholars who have brought this to light. Sec…Read more