Kevin M. Gannon is director of the Center for Excellence in Teaching and Learning and professor of history at Grand View University. He writes for the Chronicle of Higher Education, gives frequent talks and workshops, and appeared in the Oscar-nominated documentary 13th, directed by Ava DuVernay.
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Description
Acknowledgments Introduction 1. Classrooms of Death 2. The Things We Tell Our Students 3. Cultivating Transformative Teaching 4. Teaching and Learning Inclusively 5. Making Access Mean Something 6. Encouraging Choice, Collaboration, and Agency 7. A Syllabus Worth Reading 8. Pedagogy Is Not a Weapon 9. Platforms and Power 10. I Don't Know . . . Yet. Coda: Radical Hope, Even When It Seems Hopeless Notes Index
A must-read for pedagogues and theorists alike. Gannon's explorations into history, power, and academia place students and the environments in which they learn front and center for the rest of us to consider. This work isn't about reform, but transformation, and Gannon's book pushes us in the right direction."- JosE Luis Vilson, author of This Is Not A Test: A New Narrative on Race, Class, and Education "This is the book I needed to read, it was a fresh drink of water in a time of turmoil and despair in education. Gannon grounds his calls for radical hope in the work of educational scholars like Freire, hooks, and Giroux, and offers helpful examples and recommendations based on his years of teaching experience. He tackles real issues we are facing at our institutions head-on without capitulating to cliches or trendy solutions often offered in books about higher education." -Amy Collier, Middlebury College

