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Mindfulness and Critical Friendship: A New Perspective on
Professional Development for Educators assembles an international
community of scholar-practitioners from multiple disciplines who
utilize different methodologies and ideological perspectives to
reflect on and interrogate contexts that situate mindfulness and
critical friendship as constructs which support professional
development for educators. Mindfulness and critical friendship
connect critically and creatively like-minded colleagues and enable
the facilitation and promotion of transformative pedagogy and
practice. Supported by a robust set of evidence-based research, the
contributors to this collection consider the ways in which
educators can develop habits of mind and courses of action which
will support them as they cultivate their ability to thrive and
cope with the modern demands of their personal and professional
lives. This edited collection is recommended for educators of all
disciplines and for scholars of education, social science, and
psychology.
This text articulates how and why suffering can be pedagogical in
character and how it is often key to authentic and meaningful acts
of teaching and learning. This is an ancient idea from the Greek
tragedies of Aeschylus (c. 525 BCE) - pathei mathos or "learning
through suffering". In our understandable rush to ameliorate
suffering at every turn and to consider every instance of it as an
error to be avoided at all costs, we explore how the pedagogy that
can come from suffering becomes obscured and something vital to a
rich and vibrant pedagogy can be lost. This collection threads
through education, nursing, psychiatry, ecology, and medicine,
through scholarship and intimate breaths, and blends together
affinities between hermeneutic conceptions of the cultivation of
character and Buddhist meditations on suffering and its locale in
our lives. This book will be useful for graduate courses on
hermeneutic research in education, educational psychology,
counseling, and nursing/medicine.
This text articulates how and why suffering can be pedagogical in
character and how it is often key to authentic and meaningful acts
of teaching and learning. This is an ancient idea from the Greek
tragedies of Aeschylus (c. 525 BCE) - pathei mathos or "learning
through suffering". In our understandable rush to ameliorate
suffering at every turn and to consider every instance of it as an
error to be avoided at all costs, we explore how the pedagogy that
can come from suffering becomes obscured and something vital to a
rich and vibrant pedagogy can be lost. This collection threads
through education, nursing, psychiatry, ecology, and medicine,
through scholarship and intimate breaths, and blends together
affinities between hermeneutic conceptions of the cultivation of
character and Buddhist meditations on suffering and its locale in
our lives. This book will be useful for graduate courses on
hermeneutic research in education, educational psychology,
counseling, and nursing/medicine.
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