![]() Schreiber, Catherina ![]() in Hemecht : Zeitschrift für Luxemburger Geschichte = Revue d'Histoire Luxembourgeoise (2016), 68(1), 107-111 Detailed reference viewed: 141 (42 UL)![]() ![]() Schreiber, Catherina ![]() in Hadjar, Andreas; Krolak, Sabine; Priem, Karin (Eds.) et al Gender and Educational Achievement (2016) Detailed reference viewed: 96 (9 UL)![]() ![]() Schreiber, Catherina ![]() in Götz, Margarethe; Vogt, Michaela (Eds.) Schulwissen für und über Kinder (2016) Detailed reference viewed: 127 (6 UL)![]() Schreiber, Catherina ![]() in Schoellen, Marc (Ed.) Märjendall, Marienthal, Mariendall, Val-Sainte-Marie. Spurensuche in einer vielschichtigen Kulturlandschaft Luxemburgs (2016) Detailed reference viewed: 105 (6 UL)![]() ![]() Schreiber, Catherina ![]() in Hoffmann-Ocon, Andreas; Horlacher, Rebekka (Eds.) Pädagogik und pädagogisches Wissen (2016) Detailed reference viewed: 93 (3 UL)![]() ![]() Schreiber, Catherina ![]() in Doff, Sabine (Ed.) Heterogenität im Fremdsprachenunterricht. Impulse – Rahmenbedingungen – Kernfragen – Perspektiven (2016) Detailed reference viewed: 123 (12 UL)![]() Schreiber, Catherina ![]() ![]() ![]() Poster (2015, September 03) This paper puts the idea of a contingent nature of science at its fore, asking what we as researchers can learn from seemingly irreconcilable differences in our approaches and interpretations to past ... [more ▼] This paper puts the idea of a contingent nature of science at its fore, asking what we as researchers can learn from seemingly irreconcilable differences in our approaches and interpretations to past, present and future developments in science education. To do so, we aim to explore the potentials of multi-perspectivity in an academic self-experiment. The idea is to problematize science as a school discipline from different theoretical, disciplinary and methodological standpoints. By taking one concrete example of a Luxembourgian primary school curriculum document, four researchers will independently apply their individual lenses on science as a school discipline. Concretely, the coverage of the hedgehog as a “characteristic animal” in our primary school curriculum will be commented on in historical, sociocultural and pedagogical perspectives. This concrete curricular example is seemingly defined and non disputable as a content theme in primary school science education in Luxembourg, and is also to be found in international curriculum policy documents. Yet a seemingly proven fact can be interpreted in multiple ways, not only to bridge controversies, as it is done so often, but as exploring the differences in a self-reflective manner. Through such multiple interpretations, we are specifically looking for inconsistencies between the four different narratives, instead of focusing on consensual conclusions or firm and consistent patterns. Instead we will follow a multi-layered approach to research in order to undertake a métissage approach to analyzing a component of the science pedagogical practice, allowing the different understandings on the Luxembourgian science curriculum to remain and complement each other in a complex manner. [less ▲] Detailed reference viewed: 250 (41 UL)![]() Schreiber, Catherina ![]() in Encounters on Education (2015), 16 During the 19th century new forms of government emerged, understanding themselves explicitly as nation-states. The new definition of the state had to include its members by defining them as citizens, a ... [more ▼] During the 19th century new forms of government emerged, understanding themselves explicitly as nation-states. The new definition of the state had to include its members by defining them as citizens, a definition which included both equalizing and differentiating aspects. The education system fulfilled a key role in educating these future citizens. While the principal setting was not a national, I intend to show how this national logic shaped constructions of various types of nation-state citizens made through the public school, based on empirical evidence from the Luxembourgian curriculum. In an exemplifying way, the motivation behind the respective changes and continuities will be uncovered, with emphasis on social differentiation in secondary education and a strong regional differentiation in the homebound lower branches of education. [less ▲] Detailed reference viewed: 107 (20 UL)![]() Schreiber, Catherina ![]() in Tröhler, Daniel; Lenz, Thomas (Eds.) Trajectories in the Development of Modern School Systems.Between the National and the Global (2015) Detailed reference viewed: 112 (8 UL)![]() Schreiber, Catherina ![]() in IJHE Bildungsgeschichte (2015), (2), 241-243 Detailed reference viewed: 609 (1 UL)![]() ![]() Schreiber, Catherina ![]() in Tröhler, Daniel; Lenz, Thomas (Eds.) Trayectorieas del desarrollo de los sistemas educativos modernos. Entre lo nacional y lo global (2015) Detailed reference viewed: 66 (1 UL)![]() ![]() Schreiber, Catherina ![]() ![]() ![]() in Majerus, Benoît; Roemer, Charles; Thommes, Gianna (Eds.) 1914-1918: Guerre(s) au Luxembourg - Kriege in Luxemburg (2014) Sowohl die öffentlichen als auch die innerprofessionellen Diskussionen und die sich daraus ergebenden curricularen Verhandlungen belegen, dass die Schulpolitik in Luxemburg während des Ersten Weltkriegs ... [more ▼] Sowohl die öffentlichen als auch die innerprofessionellen Diskussionen und die sich daraus ergebenden curricularen Verhandlungen belegen, dass die Schulpolitik in Luxemburg während des Ersten Weltkriegs als ein Mittel zur Konstruktion einer neutralen, pazifistischen, alternativen Realität verstanden wurde, mit Hilfe derer soziale Gegebenheiten und aus dem Krieg resultierende Probleme reguliert werden konnten. Dennoch zeigte die Curriculumspolitik der Nachkriegszeit, dass solche optimistischen Konzeptionen auf Dauer nicht beizubehalten waren. [less ▲] Detailed reference viewed: 175 (27 UL)![]() Schreiber, Catherina ![]() Doctoral thesis (2014) Detailed reference viewed: 275 (47 UL)![]() Schreiber, Catherina ![]() in Educational Research (2014) Detailed reference viewed: 179 (14 UL)![]() Schreiber, Catherina ![]() in Mutations. Mémoires et perspectives du Bassin minier (2013, November) Detailed reference viewed: 116 (9 UL)![]() Rohstock, Anne ![]() ![]() in Paedagogica Historica (2013), 49(2), 174-193 Since Luxembourg became independent in 1839, practically the entire political, economic and intellectual elite of the country has been socialised abroad. It was only in 2003 that the Grand Duchy set up ... [more ▼] Since Luxembourg became independent in 1839, practically the entire political, economic and intellectual elite of the country has been socialised abroad. It was only in 2003 that the Grand Duchy set up its own university; before then, young Luxembourgers had to study in foreign countries. Over the past 150 years, Lux- embourg has thus experienced exceptionally lively student migration. This migration is almost unique in Europe; however, academic research has paid little attention to the consequences of the migration experience of whole student gen- erations on Luxembourgish society. The data presented in this paper demonstrate that migration has opened up chances for participation and access to positions of social power, while at the same time the networks of students became an instrument of social exclusion. Thus, the migration experience over the past 150 years not only led to a strong degree of social–cultural cohesion within the national elite; paradoxically, international student mobility has also had deep effects on the preservation of national identity. [less ▲] Detailed reference viewed: 144 (18 UL)![]() Schreiber, Catherina ![]() in KULT_online (2013), 36 Detailed reference viewed: 95 (3 UL)![]() Schreiber, Catherina ![]() in Saargeschichte|n (2013), (1), 24-30 Detailed reference viewed: 93 (3 UL)![]() Lenz, Thomas ![]() ![]() ![]() in Pinar, Bill (Ed.) International Handbook of Curriculum Research (2013) Detailed reference viewed: 248 (40 UL)![]() Rohstock, Anne ![]() ![]() in Forum für Politik, Gesellschaft und Kultur in Luxemburg (2012), (314), 33-35 Since Luxembourg became independent in 1839, practically the entire political, economic and intellectual elite of the country has been socialised abroad. It was only in 2003 that the Grand Duchy set up ... [more ▼] Since Luxembourg became independent in 1839, practically the entire political, economic and intellectual elite of the country has been socialised abroad. It was only in 2003 that the Grand Duchy set up its own university; before then, young Luxembourgers had to study in foreign countries. Over the past 150 years, Lux- embourg has thus experienced exceptionally lively student migration. This migration is almost unique in Europe; however, academic research has paid little attention to the consequences of the migration experience of whole student gen- erations on Luxembourgish society. The data presented in this paper demonstrate that migration has opened up chances for participation and access to positions of social power, while at the same time the networks of students became an instrument of social exclusion. Thus, the migration experience over the past 150 years not only led to a strong degree of social–cultural cohesion within the national elite; paradoxically, international student mobility has also had deep effects on the preservation of national identity. [less ▲] Detailed reference viewed: 147 (6 UL) |
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