“…Teaching for social justice is an increasingly popular ideological, curricular, and pedagogical approach to promoting equity and justice in P-12 classrooms (e.g., Agarwal, Epstein, Oppenheim, Oyler, & Sonu, 2010;Bender-Slack, 2010;Esposito & Swain, 2009;Kelly & Brandes, 2008;Shakman et al, 2007), and additional research explores the application of social justice frameworks in teacher education (e.g., Cochran-Smith, Gleeson, & Mitchell, 2010;Gorski, 2010;Grant & Agosoto, 2008). However, though numerous researchers have explored tensions within and across the multiple, and sometimes competing, interpretations of social justice in education (e.g., Cochran-Smith et al, 2009;North, 2006North, , 2008Shakman et al, 2007), there has been limited examination of how teachers translate their theoretical frameworks into curricular and pedagogical practice, especially in the current climate of accountability mandates.…”