Arugula, pine nuts, and hegemony: seven women’s choreopoetic reflection on the absence of cultural relevance in educational discourse

2012 
Choreopoetic narrative storytelling is presented here, where discourse centered on the intersections of race, class, identity, and critical consciousness is performed in a multi-perspectival interpretation of the hegemonic discourses dominating the educational domain as a result of No Child Left Behind. This interpretative and reflective piece focuses on classism, pedagogy, and policy, and highlights reactions from the authors’ experiences when they attended an academic conference focused on “instructional innovation.” Absent from the conference was a critical examination of the testing and accountability regime that dictates pedagogy and educational policy, particularly as it relates to the dispossessed – the poor and cultural, linguistic, and ethnic minorities in K-16 schools. This piece illustrates the power of choreopoetic storytelling as both an artistic and political esthetic for shaping critical consciousness in educational discourse.
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