Mindful and Relational Teacher Approaches to Social Justice in Teacher Education

Mindful and Relational Teacher Approaches to Social Justice in Teacher Education
Author: Julian Kitchen
Publisher: Lexington Books
Total Pages: 178
Release: 2019-12-15
Genre: Education
ISBN: 9781498598910

This volume explores how social justice is critical to making education accessible and meaningful to all. Mindfulness and relational teacher education offer effective ways to engage aspiring teachers in preparing youth for a diverse and changing world.

Mindful and Relational Approaches to Social Justice, Equity, and Diversity in Teacher Education

Mindful and Relational Approaches to Social Justice, Equity, and Diversity in Teacher Education
Author: Julian Kitchen
Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
Total Pages: 180
Release: 2019-12-30
Genre: Education
ISBN: 1498598927

As teaching is socially, culturally, and politically constructed, it is important that teacher educators committed to social justice attempt to create secure environment where all voices are heard and teacher candidates can inquire into personally and socially challenging topics within a safe and caring classroom culture. Relationships of trust are fundamental to teaching about social justice and to being receptive as learners in such classes. Mindfulness on the part of teacher educators and teacher candidates can go a long way in fostering respect, openness and acceptance in such classes. Together they can lead to teacher educators and candidates thinking deeply about themselves, schools and schooling as they move towards a vision of a more equitable and just society. The teacher educators who have contributed to this volume recognize the challenges of balancing respect for their students with the call to social justice. Their accounts and critical reflections convey how relational and mindful approaches might offer positive avenues to self and shared exploration by teacher candidates and teacher educators alike. Several chapters attend to the challenges for educators as they encounter culturally and linguistically diverse contexts. Others attend to these issues within the complexity of diverse university classrooms in order to guide teacher candidates towards dispositions and practices that help foster inclusion and engage diverse learners and communities. Together, these chapters offer thoughtful approaches to living alongside aspiring teachers as they develop deeper understanding of the concepts of race and diversity, and inclusive approaches to teaching and learning.

Self-Study and Diversity III

Self-Study and Diversity III
Author:
Publisher: BRILL
Total Pages: 251
Release: 2021-11-15
Genre: Education
ISBN: 9004505210

This book is about the self-study of teacher education practices at a time when inclusion and diversity are being questioned. Authors of various backgrounds and identities draw on their own experiences to examine the challenges of preparing teachers.

Exploring Self toward expanding Teaching, Teacher Education and Practitioner Research

Exploring Self toward expanding Teaching, Teacher Education and Practitioner Research
Author: Oren Ergas
Publisher: Emerald Group Publishing
Total Pages: 280
Release: 2020-10-29
Genre: Education
ISBN: 1839822627

Against the backdrop of a pull toward external standards and accountability, this collection of chapters re-grounds us in the importance of bringing the 'self' to the foreground of the discourse of teaching, teacher education and practitioner research.

Mindful Social Studies

Mindful Social Studies
Author: Natalie Keefer
Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
Total Pages: 333
Release: 2022-08-16
Genre: Education
ISBN: 1666908002

Mindful Social Studies: Frameworks for Social Emotional Learning and Critically Engaged Citizens situates the field of social studies education as uniquely poised to integrate anti-racist, equity, and asset-based pedagogies with contemplative, mindfulness-based strategies to promote the knowledge, skills, and dispositions students need to be effective citizens. Students’ Social Emotional Learning (SEL) hinges upon their experience(s) engaging in authentic learning that strengthens cognitive skills, including critical thinking, self-awareness, reflection, compassion, empathy, and perspective taking. In this volume, the co-editors have curated reflective K-16 practitioner-style, research-focused, and theory-based chapters that explore social justice-orientated contemplative pedagogies, as well as mindfulness-related frameworks and strategies for teaching social studies and the social and behavioral sciences. In this book, chapter authors explore ways of cultivating specific mindfulness-related social studies dispositions and transformative rationales and approaches for critical mindfulness and SEL based on compelling arguments for meeting the needs of students, families, and educators in a dynamic and increasingly diverse society.

Cross-Disciplinary, Cross-Institutional Collaboration in Teacher Education

Cross-Disciplinary, Cross-Institutional Collaboration in Teacher Education
Author: Cheryl J. Craig
Publisher: Springer Nature
Total Pages: 410
Release: 2020-11-24
Genre: Education
ISBN: 3030566749

This book focuses on the impact of sustained and evolving collaborations, showcasing research and scholarship in a faculty group—consisting of 28 professors from five regional universities—meeting and supporting each other since 2002. Originally an innovation introduced by Cheryl J. Craig and funded by a reform movement, the Faculty Academy continues to flourish in the fourth largest city in America long after the reform initiative abandoned its charge. Contributors to this volume represent all stages of careers, include all races and genders, and write from a multiplicity of disciplinary stances (literacy, mathematics, science, social education, multiculturalism, English as a Second Language, accountability, etc.). In addition to fascinatingly diverse perspectives on teacher education, the authors also investigate issues related to career trajectories—including experiences of vulnerability. The volume illuminates how the Faculty Academy works as a dynamic academic and social bond: not only as a glue that binds members in community, but also in rigorous intellectual commitments that fuel their collective knowing and advance their careers while providing leadership, mentorship, and modelling in up-close and timely ways.

The Mindful Classroom

The Mindful Classroom
Author: Tru Leverette
Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
Total Pages: 185
Release: 2022-02-10
Genre: Education
ISBN: 1793635412

The Mindful Classroom: Constructive Conversations on Race, Identity, and Justice helps teachers and discussion facilitators practice and teach mindfulness and movement techniques that can deeply enhance conversations about race, identity, and social justice, furthering social justice efforts at their most basic stage—person to person—from the face-to-face or online classroom to the community at large. Mindfulness and movement practices can help us prepare for and engage in difficult conversations, and the more conscious we become of our emotional, mental, and physical landscape, the more we are able to engage proactively rather than reactively, consciously rather than automatically. We become able to act (or not act), rather than react in situations with others. The topics of race and social justice are timely, and they are triggers. Productive engagement with these topics demands we remain mindful of how we may be triggered and how we may be triggering others; it demands we pay attention to ourselves at a fundamental level, and it demands that we grant such attention to others.

Learning, Leading, and the Best-Loved Self in Teaching and Teacher Education

Learning, Leading, and the Best-Loved Self in Teaching and Teacher Education
Author: Cheryl J. Craig
Publisher: Springer Nature
Total Pages: 353
Release: 2022-12-10
Genre: Education
ISBN: 3031119029

This book explores the concept of the "best-loved self" in teaching and teacher education, asserting that the best-loved self is foundational to the development of teacher identity, growth in context, and learning in community. Drawing on the work of Joseph Schwab, who was the first to name the "best-loved self," the editors and their contributors extend this knowledge further through the collaboration of their group of teacher educators, known as the Faculty Academy, who have been involved in examining teacher education for over two decades.

Writing as a Method for the Self-Study of Practice

Writing as a Method for the Self-Study of Practice
Author: Julian Kitchen
Publisher: Springer Nature
Total Pages: 256
Release: 2022-01-01
Genre: Education
ISBN: 9811624984

This book focuses on the writing process in the self-study of teaching and teacher education practices. It addresses writing as an area in which teacher educators can develop their skills and represents how to write in ways that are compatible with self-study's orientations towards the inquiry, both personal and on practice. The book examines effective self-study writing with chapters written by experienced self-study practitioners. In addition to considering elements of writing as a method for the self-study of practice, it delves into the cognitive processes of real writers making explicit their writing practices. Practical suggestions are connected to the lived experiences of self-study practitioners making sense of their field through the process of writing. This book will be of interest to doctoral and novice self-study writers, and experienced authors seeking to develop their practice. It demonstrates that writing as a method of inquiry in self-study and beyond can be learned, modeled and taught.

Resilience and Resistance through Contemplative Practice

Resilience and Resistance through Contemplative Practice
Author: Nicole Bauer
Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
Total Pages: 163
Release: 2024-06-17
Genre: Education
ISBN: 1666956570

Burnout, imposter syndrome, changes in higher education, issues of free speech, structural inequality—the challenges facing academics today are daunting and overwhelming. How do we balance all of our responsibilities and goals without becoming exhausted? How do scholars decide if activism is right for them, and if so, what form should it take? There is, fortunately, great wisdom, solace, and practical advice for the modern academic in ancient wisdom traditions, indigenous cultures, and contemplative practices like meditation from around the world. In Resilience and Resitance through Contemplative Practice: Zen and the Anxious Academic, the author argues that contemplative practice is not a substitute for social change or a band-aid for the difficulties academics face, but rather a powerful tool in building resilience and resistance to forces that undermine our well-being. Learn, for example, how Jungian psychology and ancient dream practices can help with academic writing, how the concept of dharma can lead us to discern our vocation and if activism is the right path for us, and how meditation can help us rediscover our innate self-worth in a culture where value is judged by narrow definitions of productivity and achievement. With these tools and insights, we can create positive change in both our inner and outer worlds.