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This book is the true story of my quest to live as a free spirit
for a year of my life, mentally, physically and sexually. The year
is 1975, I was 24 and I had abandoned a marriage and walked away
from a secure job as a BBC make-up artist. Where in the modern
world would I find the wide open horizons that I sought? How would
I live? Would I share the adventure? The ocean, a boat and an open
relationship provided my answers. Travelling with no fixed
itinerary, no advance reservations, no return ticket and no fixed
destination. We became true free spirits open to the dictionary's
definition of adventure: 'one who lives on his wits. Risk. A
remarkable happening.' My mood was at odds with the rest of the
country. After the previous year's three day week, strikes and
Harold Wilson's minority government, Britain was bracing itself for
Denis Healey's tough new budget. I was about to sail away from all
this, but what lay ahead could be much worse and certainly carried
more risk. Restless, excited, optimistic and definitely naive I did
it anyway. There is a phrase, "be careful what you wish for as it
might come true"
In Promoting Early Career Teacher Resilience the stories of 60
graduate teachers are documented as they grapple with some of the
most persistent and protracted personal and professional struggles
facing teachers today. Narratives emerge detailing feelings of
frustration, disillusionment and even outrage as they struggle with
the complexity, intensity and immediacy of life in schools. Other
stories also surface to show exhilarating experiences, documenting
the wonder, joy and excitement of working with young people for the
first time. This book makes sense of these experiences in ways that
can assist education systems, schools, and faculties of teacher
education, as well as early career teachers themselves to develop
more powerful forms of critical teacher resilience. Rejecting
psychological explanations of teacher resilience, it endorses an
alternative socio-cultural and critical approach to understanding
teacher resilience. The book crosses physical borders and
represents experiences of teachers in similar circumstances across
the globe, providing researchers and teachers with real-life
examples of resilience promoting policies and practices. This book
is not written as an account of the failures of an education
system, but rather as a provocation to help generate ideas,
policies and practices capable of illuminating the experiences of
early career teachers in more critical and socially just ways at an
international and national level.
In Promoting Early Career Teacher Resilience the stories of 60
graduate teachers are documented as they grapple with some of the
most persistent and protracted personal and professional struggles
facing teachers today. Narratives emerge detailing feelings of
frustration, disillusionment and even outrage as they struggle with
the complexity, intensity and immediacy of life in schools. Other
stories also surface to show exhilarating experiences, documenting
the wonder, joy and excitement of working with young people for the
first time. This book makes sense of these experiences in ways that
can assist education systems, schools, and faculties of teacher
education, as well as early career teachers themselves to develop
more powerful forms of critical teacher resilience. Rejecting
psychological explanations of teacher resilience, it endorses an
alternative socio-cultural and critical approach to understanding
teacher resilience. The book crosses physical borders and
represents experiences of teachers in similar circumstances across
the globe, providing researchers and teachers with real-life
examples of resilience promoting policies and practices. This book
is not written as an account of the failures of an education
system, but rather as a provocation to help generate ideas,
policies and practices capable of illuminating the experiences of
early career teachers in more critical and socially just ways at an
international and national level.
This book addresses one of the most persistent issues confronting
governments, educations systems and schools today: the attraction,
preparation, and retention of early career teachers. It draws on
the stories of sixty graduate teachers from Australia to identify
the key barriers, interferences and obstacles to teacher resilience
and what might be done about it. Based on these stories, five
interrelated themes - policies and practices, school culture,
teacher identity, teachers' work, and relationships - provide a
framework for dialogue around what kinds of conditions need to be
created and sustained in order to promote early career teacher
resilience. The book provides a set of resources - stories,
discussion, comments, reflective questions and insights from the
literature - to promote conversations among stakeholders rather
than providing yet another 'how to do' list for improving the daily
lives of early career teachers. Teaching is a complex, fragile and
uncertain profession. It operates in an environment of
unprecedented educational reforms designed to control, manage and
manipulate pedagogical judgements. Teacher resilience must take
account of both the context and circumstances of individual schools
(especially those in economically disadvantaged communities) and
the diversity of backgrounds and talents of early career teachers
themselves. The book acknowledges that the substantial level of
change required- cultural, structural, pedagogical and relational -
to improve early career teacher resilience demands a great deal of
cooperation and support from governments, education systems,
schools, universities and communities: teachers cannot do it alone.
This book is written to generate conversations amongst early career
teachers, teacher colleagues, school leaders, education
administrators, academics and community leaders about the kinds of
pedagogical and relational conditions required to promote early
career teacher resilience and wellbeing.
Doing Research in Design presents new ways of thinking about the
relationship between design and research by positioning design as a
social as well as a material practice. This approach emphasises the
social consequences of design decisions as well as the importance
of the efficient functioning of a design. Doing Research in Design
argues that design promotes social change and that, in order to
understand that change, designers must turn to social science
research methods. The book outlines the relationships between
thinking and doing in design - and makes explicit links between
design, research, philosophy and sociology - and then examines four
central social research methodologies in practice. The aim of Doing
Research in Design is to provide anyone involved in the field of
design with the knowledge and understanding of the best methods to
plan and conduct their research.
This book is the true story of my quest to live as a free spirit
for a year of my life, mentally, physically and sexually. The year
is 1975, I was 24 and I had abandoned a marriage and walked away
from a secure job as a BBC make-up artist. Where in the modern
world would I find the wide open horizons that I sought? How would
I live? Would I share the adventure? The ocean, a boat and an open
relationship provided my answers. Travelling with no fixed
itinerary, no advance reservations, no return ticket and no fixed
destination. We became true free spirits open to the dictionary's
definition of adventure: 'one who lives on his wits. Risk. A
remarkable happening.' My mood was at odds with the rest of the
country. After the previous year's three day week, strikes and
Harold Wilson's minority government, Britain was bracing itself for
Denis Healey's tough new budget. I was about to sail away from all
this, but what lay ahead could be much worse and certainly carried
more risk. Restless, excited, optimistic and definitely naive I did
it anyway. There is a phrase, "be careful what you wish for as it
might come true"
The book is an educational read for young children written by MJ
Doing Research in Design presents new ways of thinking about the
relationship between design and research by positioning design as a
social as well as a material practice. This approach emphasises the
social consequences of design decisions as well as the importance
of the efficient functioning of a design. Doing Research in Design
argues that design promotes social change and that, in order to
understand that change, designers must turn to social science
research methods. The book outlines the relationships between
thinking and doing in design - and makes explicit links between
design, research, philosophy and sociology - and then examines four
central social research methodologies in practice. The aim of Doing
Research in Design is to provide anyone involved in the field of
design with the knowledge and understanding of the best methods to
plan and conduct their research.
Most academics receive little formal training to teach yet many
become excellent and inspiring university teachers. This book
uncovers some of the experiences and personal motivations of eight
academics who themselves became highly successful university
teachers. Through their stories of significant people and key
events in their lives the academics explore some of the elements
that have helped shape them as teachers, beginning with their
earliest experiences of learning and ending with reflections on
their work as teachers in a university. Woven through the personal
narratives is discussion of elements such as the relationship
between identity and pedagogy, the development of personal theories
of teaching and learning, the role of reflexivity in professional
learning, and the impact of institutional expectations on
possibilities for practice. The narratives are engaging and
accessible. Teachers everywhere will find inspiration in the
stories of these academics, who in their different ways have
enriched the lives of students and colleagues through their work as
teachers.
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Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
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R383
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Discovery Miles 3 100
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