Emphasis:
Teaching & Learning, Research Methodology, Cultural Perspectives & Comparative Education
Research Interests:
Learning within and across disciplines; Learning and technology; Classroom research; Literacy across disciplines; Learning in community; Research methods--qualitative, ethnographic; Cross case research; Action research; Early childhood education; Knowledge construction in classrooms
Biography:
My teaching and research focus on teaching-learning relationships, disciplinary knowledge as socially constructed, and ethnographic research and discourse studies of the patterns of everyday life in classroom.
Questions that I explore in my research and in my classes include:
How do children gain access to school knowledge?
What counts as literacy and learning in school settings?
How is disciplinary knowledge socially constructed?
What opportunities for learning are constructed in classrooms, and who has access to these opportunities?
How does the theory you select shape your research questions, the methods you use, and the claims that you can make about a phenomenon?
As a founding member of the Santa Barbara Classroom Discourse Group, a collaborative community of teacher ethnographers, student ethnographers and university-based ethnographers, I explore questions guided by theories on the social construction of knowledge. Our goal is to identify principles of practices that teachers (and others) use to support equity of access for all students.
As a co-director of LINC, the Center for Education Research for Literacy and Inquiry in Networking Communities, I work with teachers and researchers to explore how the new advanced technology networks support innovative learning opportunities. My colleagues and I have an approach to curriculum and technology in which teachers and students create a virtual and interactive community in which they plan collaborative research across city, state and national borders and share their local inquiry to make global connections.
Educational Background
I have been teaching for more than 4 decades across levels of schooling (K-20). I received my M.A. in Educational Psychology from California State University, Northridge (1970), where I learned about child and language development. I received my Ph.D. from the University of California, Berkeley, where I explored the relationships between teaching and learning, literacy and knowledge construction. My recent research focuses on how classroom practices support access to students across academic disciplines in classrooms and in virtual communities.
Recent Publications:
Green, J.L., Skukauskaite, A., Dixon, C., & Cordova, R. Epistemological issues in the analysis of video records: Interactional ethnography as a logic of inquiry. In R. Goldman, B. Barron, S. Derry, & R. Pea(Eds.) Video research in the learning sciences. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum. 2007. [Book Chapter]
Green, J.L., & Dixon, C. Classroom interaction, situated learning. In M. Martin-Jones & A. M. de Mejia (Eds.), Encyclopedia of language and education, vol. 3. Heidelberg, Germany: Springer Science. 2007. [Encyclopedia Article]
Castanheira, M.L, Green, J.L., Dixon, C., & Yeager, B. Studying the complexity of classroom life: Dimensions of identity construction in a bilingual fifth grade. Anais do I Congresso Interacional da ABRAPUI Faculdade de Letras- UFMG, Belo Horizonte, Brasil, 3 a 6 de Junho de 2007. (Proceedings of the 1st International ABRAPUI Conference, realized at School of Letters, UFMG, Brasil, June 3-6, 2007). 2007. [Proceedings Article]
Green, J.L., Camilli, G., & Elmore, P.B. (Eds.). Handbook of complementary methods in education research. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum for American Educational Research Association. 2006. [Edited Book]
Green, J.L., Camilli, G., & Elmore, P.B. (Eds.). Introduction to the handbook: What’s complementary about complementary methods. In J. Green, G. Camilli, & P. B. Elmore (Eds.), Handbook of complementary methods in education research, (xv-xx). Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum for American Educational Research Association. 2006. [Introduction]
Awards and Honors:
Division G, Lifetime Achievement Award, 2006
Sir Allen Sewell Research Fellowship, 2006
Affiliations:
American Anthropology Association
American Educational Research Association
Council for Anthropology and Education
International Reading Association
National Council of Teachers of English
National Conference for Research on Language and Literacy
National Reading Conference
Special Interest Groups, American Educational Research Association: Language and Social Processes, Cultural Historical SIG