An Introduction to Janet L. Miller
Janet L. Miller is a
professor of English Education, as well as a Program Coordinator, at Columbia
University’s Teachers College. She is widely published in many curriculum
journals, including, but not limited to: Curriculum Inquiry, Educational
Theory, Journal of Curriculum and Supervision, Educational
Foundations, English Journal, Journal of Curriculum Studies, English
Education, and Journal of Curriculum Theorizing. However,
Miller is best known for her books: Creating Spaces and Finding Voices:
Teachers Collaborating for Empowerment; Sounds of Silence Breaking:
Women, Autobiography, Curriculum; and A Light in Dark Times: Maxine
Greene and the Unfinished Conversation. This award-winning author
served as Managing Editor of The Journal of Curriculum Theorizing from
its first publication in 1978 until 1998. Alongside Pinar, she also
helped to organize the Bergamo Annual Conference on Curriculum Theory and
Classroom Practice as Program Chair for many years, when it began in 1974.
Miller grew up in
Pittsburgh and then went on to complete an M.A. in English Education from the
University of Rochester. She then earned a Ph. D. in Humanities Education
and Curriculum Theory from The Ohio State University. After graduating,
Janet Miller taught as a high school English teacher before becoming a
university professor. This award-winning curriculum scholar is best known
for her specialization in English Education, School Reform and Restructuring,
as well as Feminism. In 2007, Janet Miller was named a Fellow by the American
Education Research Association for her work on "intersections of
curriculum and feminist theories, constructions of teacher subjectivities in
collaborative school reform and research efforts, and biography and
autobiography as postmodern forms of qualitative inquiry." She
is considered a leader in the re-conceptualist curriculum movement and was
recognized in 2008 by the American Education Research Association with a
Lifetime Achievement Award.
When analyzing the various
works of Janet L. Miller, several themes arise. The section below provides a
review of most recent works. These include: Curriculum and Pedagogy as
Unpredictable Processes of Engagement (2004), The American Curriculum
Field and Its Worldly Encounters (2005), and Curriculum Studies and
Transnational Flows and Mobilities: Feminist Autobiographical Perspectives
(2006). Within these reviews, themes from her book Sounds of Silence
Breaking and article, What’s Left in the Field: A Curriculum Memoir,
is also provided.
Curriculum and Pedagogy as Unpredictable Processes of Engagement
Janet L. Miller argues that when the familiar categories used to conceptualize curriculum break down in the face of complexities, bureaucrats in the United States turn to the constructed category of ‘scientific research’. This is more comfortable and known, and is able to be quantified and measured in an age of accountability and standardization. However, there is a fundamental aspect not considered- the “complexities, the unknowable and the undecided, the ambiguities of lived lives that always frame our engagements with curriculum and pedagogy” (Miller 2005, p.43). This focus on high-stakes accountability can have a profound impact on the professional lives of teachers and the lived experiences of children whereby curriculum does not encourage individuals to share their own stories. Learning takes place on a subjective and personal level, therefore allowing discussions of student’s lived experiences is important has this shapes their interaction with curriculum and pedagogy.
Over the last 30 years, researchers have begun to focus on the conflicted identities, and explosion of contradictory and competing knowledges. They have found that even science, like all human endeavors, is a cultural practice which is constantly evolving and changing. Here, Miller states that “perhaps, after all, there is hope” (p.44). Curriculum and pedagogy are not concrete situations, and their intertwined relations cannot be mandated in policy and curriculum across the United States, or anywhere for that matter. Instead, they are processes of engagement with the unpredictable and unknown. This may lead to tension and challenges in curriculum and pedagogy, when teachers in particular, feel the need to always have the right answer. Instead, teachers and students must embrace the complexities within their own lived experiences and discuss this tension within the classroom- even if this means that at the end of the conversation, students are left with more questions than answers.
Miller lastly discusses her hope for The Journal of Curriculum & Pedagogy, whereby, “prescriptive mandates and categories can be challenged, broke down and even shattered by the tangled complexities of our students’, our colleagues’, and our own daily lived lives” (p.44). The journal provides a space for individuals to discuss their own engagements with curriculum and pedagogy, and the meaning attached to the processes. While it is important for researchers to have an international forum such as The Journal of Curriculum and Pedagogy, one has to cognizant of the voices that are represented in the journal. Are the voices that are shared representative of diverse experiences and cultures? Do they discuss the complexities, unknowable and ambiguities of lived lives? Which voices are silenced? How do ‘unconscious assumptions’ (Bhabha, 1988) shape our lived experiences that we share?
Janet L. Miller argues that when the familiar categories used to conceptualize curriculum break down in the face of complexities, bureaucrats in the United States turn to the constructed category of ‘scientific research’. This is more comfortable and known, and is able to be quantified and measured in an age of accountability and standardization. However, there is a fundamental aspect not considered- the “complexities, the unknowable and the undecided, the ambiguities of lived lives that always frame our engagements with curriculum and pedagogy” (Miller 2005, p.43). This focus on high-stakes accountability can have a profound impact on the professional lives of teachers and the lived experiences of children whereby curriculum does not encourage individuals to share their own stories. Learning takes place on a subjective and personal level, therefore allowing discussions of student’s lived experiences is important has this shapes their interaction with curriculum and pedagogy.
Over the last 30 years, researchers have begun to focus on the conflicted identities, and explosion of contradictory and competing knowledges. They have found that even science, like all human endeavors, is a cultural practice which is constantly evolving and changing. Here, Miller states that “perhaps, after all, there is hope” (p.44). Curriculum and pedagogy are not concrete situations, and their intertwined relations cannot be mandated in policy and curriculum across the United States, or anywhere for that matter. Instead, they are processes of engagement with the unpredictable and unknown. This may lead to tension and challenges in curriculum and pedagogy, when teachers in particular, feel the need to always have the right answer. Instead, teachers and students must embrace the complexities within their own lived experiences and discuss this tension within the classroom- even if this means that at the end of the conversation, students are left with more questions than answers.
Miller lastly discusses her hope for The Journal of Curriculum & Pedagogy, whereby, “prescriptive mandates and categories can be challenged, broke down and even shattered by the tangled complexities of our students’, our colleagues’, and our own daily lived lives” (p.44). The journal provides a space for individuals to discuss their own engagements with curriculum and pedagogy, and the meaning attached to the processes. While it is important for researchers to have an international forum such as The Journal of Curriculum and Pedagogy, one has to cognizant of the voices that are represented in the journal. Are the voices that are shared representative of diverse experiences and cultures? Do they discuss the complexities, unknowable and ambiguities of lived lives? Which voices are silenced? How do ‘unconscious assumptions’ (Bhabha, 1988) shape our lived experiences that we share?
The American Curriculum Field and Its Wordly Encounters
Janet L. Miller
remains continuously aware of the need for curriculum theorists, teachers,
administrators, students and their parents to “move beyond” what they are now
and to be open to “new possibility for collective exchange” (Miller, p.1). Newness,
openness and a desire to move forward are always her goal and this is at times
difficult in the face of what she believes to be a “bifurcated, Balkanized, and
insulated American curriculum field” (p.6). Miller is disheartened by the
standardizing and technologizing of the US curriculum field, but warns against
endless debates that don’t lead to progress. She desires a curriculum
field that is continually motivated by “worldliness”, without losing sight of
the need for local and which is driven by encounters.
Within this piece, Miller identifies the need for interactive
discussion with the goal of redefining the American identity and paying
particular attention to the current “contexts and conditions” in order to
reinvent curriculum (p. 5). She warns of the dangers of viewing the US
curriculum as a text that is a “hermetically sealed cosmos” that is constructed
as a “pre-ordained and sequenced systems of subject matter, disconnected from
diverse persons”(p.5). This concern over a stagnant curriculum that does
not allow for more human elements is often a theme in Miller’s work. She
shares her autobiographical experiences in “What’s Left in the Field…A
Curriculum Memoir” when she divulges her own personal teaching experience,
where she herself found the “pre-packaged” nature of curriculum stifling
(Miller, 2000). She goes on to describe her experience with curriculum as
a high school teacher who was determined to help her and her students make
meaningful connections outside of the scope of the text, “I attempted to juggle
the demands of a curriculum, conceived as a set of predetermined objectives for
my high school English students to achieve, and my own need by now to make
connections among works of art and the circumstances of our everyday lives”
(Miller, 2000).
It was these restrictive experiences that fuel Janet Miller to rethink US
curriculum and see it as a “field always in-the-making” (p.4). She
remains hopeful and committed to the notion that being mindful of
“worldliness”, encounters with persons whose passion is the reconceptualization
of curriculum, as well as the inclusion of both local and international
perspectives, will bring about newness “again and again” (p.7). This
author is most comfortable when disrupting the “traditional” and invites a
myriad of voices and perspectives to participate in re-visioning US curriculum,
in both text and practice.
Curriculum Studies and Transnational Flows and Mobilities:
Feminist Autobiographical Perspectives
Janet L. Miller discusses the
ways in which international flows and mobilities are at the essence of a
worldwide curriculum field in the article, Curriculum Studies and
Transnational Flows and Mobilities: Feminist Autobiographical Perspectives. She
questions that given transnational flows and mobilities, what kinds of
differing knowledges do divergent members of a worldwide curriculum studies
field now need to construct in order to contribute to the intellectual
advancement of a worldwide field? To help address this question, Miller first
turns to the existing perspectives on global flows and mobilities that
circulate among academic disciplines. One perspective that resonated with my
views of transnational flows was Manual Castella's. Castella (2000) proposes
the idea that there is a new spatial form characterized by social practices
that dominate society: the space of flows. These flows can involve capital,
information, technology, organizational intersections, images, sounds and
symbols. All of these interactions and flows are supported and facilitated by
innovative technology. Transnational connections are more easily made today
with the use of the Internet, cellphone technology and the ability for
individuals to physically travel more readily. These flows and mobilities are
unavoidable today (Miller, 2006).
The article also discusses
the tension between the global and the local through these flows and
mobilities. There is a need in curriculum and education today to address what
is meant by “be global and local at once” (Miller, 2006). Miller argues that
the increasing density of transnational connections gives us a global sense of
the local, and allows for greater flows and mobilities of communication and
association across diverse terrains and social locations. However, while there
are global processes that affect education such as the globalization of the
economy and the diminishing power of the nation state, there is a shared
responsibility to look at the experience of the embodied person and their own
local complex histories. This is supported by Miller’s use of autobiographical
writing in her research. This is used to help situate her lived experiences and
perspective on how these stories can be used to help facilitate a collective
exchange within the context of a worldwide curriculum studies field.
Within a worldwide curriculum studies field, Miller discusses the fundamental
role of feminist perspectives. She argues that these feminist interrogations
could “contribute to curriculum scholars’ negotiations of cultural,
geographical, linguistic, and theoretical differences across a worldwide
curriculum studies field” (Miller, p. 31). From her biography, Miller
expresses her passion for collaborating with female graduate students from an
international field, and her use of gender as a theoretical perspective speaks
greatly to the field of curriculum studies. This collaboration with female
counterparts shows Miller's commitment to transnational flows and mobilities in
theory and practice. Miller's book Sounds of Silence Breaking also looks
at the important role of gender in curriculum studies. Miller underscores how
changing narrative and interpretive practices have framed and re-framed
constructions of her gendered work (Columbia, 2012).
Conclusion
Overall, Janet Miller's work on
curriculum has greatly contributed to our understanding of gender and
autobiography in curriculum studies. The articles we reviewed looked primarily
at the role of autobiography, and that our own identities are constantly in
flux. Her work has deliberately complicated our assumptions of Canadian
curriculum studies, by stating that the tensions within our discussions are not
necessarily going to be resolved. These tensions need to be discussed at a
local and international level. This will help the international curriculum
field specifically move toward "producing intercultural understanding and
actively valuing cultural diversity so that it does not merely assimilate
national (local) curriculum discourses-practices into an imperial (global) archive"
(Gough, 2004). A limitation of Janet Miller's work is whether the theorizing
that happens with her 'encounters', how does it influence the formal schooling
curriculum within the United States. Are these conversations and theories
limited to an international curriculum field, or are these intended to be
applied to the learning of students in the United States and beyond?
References
Butler, J. (2001b). Transformative Encounters.
In E. Beck-Gernsheim, J. Butler, & L. Puigvert. Women and Social Transformation
(1-28). New York: Peter Lang Publishing.
Gough, N. (2004). Editorial: A vision for transnational curriculum
inquiry. Transnational Curriculum Inquiry, 1(1).
Miller, J.L. (2006). Curriculum studies and transnational flows
and mobilities: Feminist autobiographical perspectives. Transnational
Curriculum Inquiry. 3(2): 32-50.
Miller, J. L. (2005). The American Curriculum Field and its
Worldly Encounters. Journal of Curriculum Theorizing, 21, (2),
1-11.
Miller, J. L. (2005). Sounds of Silence Breaking: Women,
Autobiography, Curriculum. New York: Peter Lang.
Miller, J. L. (2000). What's left in the field .... A curriculum
memoir. Journal of Curriculum Studies, 32, (2), 253-266.
Columbia University (2012).
Janet Miller Academics. Retrieve June 20, 2012 from
http://www.tc.columbia.edu/academics/?facid=jm1397d.