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Bestselling author Max van Manen's Researching Lived Experience
introduces a human science approach to research methodology in
education and related fields. The book takes as its starting point
the "everyday lived experience" of human beings in educational
situations. Rather than rely on abstract generalizations and
theories in the traditional sense, the author offers an alternative
that taps the unique nature of each human situation. First
published in 1990, this book is a classic of social science
methodology and phenomenological research, selling tens of
thousands of copies over the past quarter century. Left Coast is
making available the second edition of this work, never before
released outside Canada. Researching Lived Experience offers
detailed methodological explications and practical examples of
inquiry. It shows how to orient oneself to human experience in
education and how to construct a textual question which evokes a
fundamental sense of wonder, and it provides a broad and systematic
set of approaches for gaining experiential material which forms the
basis for textual reflections. The author: -Discusses the part
played by language in educational research-Pays special attention
to the methodological function of anecdotal narrative in
research-Offers approaches to structuring the research text in
relation to the particular kinds of questions being studied
In the revised and updated second edition of The Tone of Teaching,
bestselling author Max van Manen defines sound pedagogy as the
ability to distinguish effectively between what is appropriate, and
what is less appropriate in our communications and dealings with
children and young people as parents and educators. The author:
-Shows how tactful educators develop a caring attentiveness to the
unique; to the uniqueness of children, and to the uniqueness of
their individual lives-Describes how this "tone" of teaching can be
sustained by the cultivation of a certain kind of seeing,
listening, and responding to each child in each particular
situation-Offers practical insights for both educators and parents
Classic Writings for a Phenomenology of Practice features examples
of newly translated classic phenomenological texts that have been
largely forgotten or misunderstood. The writings are unique in that
they speak to the practice of doing phenomenological research for
the purpose of gaining insights and better understandings regarding
aspects of professional practice and ordinary life phenomena and
events. Phenomenology does not have to be impenetrable philosophy,
dealing with tedious technical issues. Instead, phenomenology may
offer relevance, value, and enduring allure to readers and
researchers who are engaged with the quotidian life experiences and
events of students, patients, clients, friends, and other
individuals. This phenomenological approach aims to stay as close
as possible to the ordinary events of everyday life: seeing the
first smile of a child, feeling compulsive, being humorous, having
a conversation, experiencing childhood secrecy, encountering new
things-topics that span a manifold of life experiences. In this
collection of classic phenomenological writings, each author is
thoughtfully introduced, and each text is followed by a
conversational descant: a reflection on the phenomenological
reflection. The presentation of these classic writings and their
reflections aims to show us what it means to do phenomenology
directly on the phenomena that we live-thus asking us to be
attentive to the fascinating varieties and subtleties of primal
lived experiences and consciousness in all its remarkable
complexities. This book is relevant for scholars and students who
are interested in human science research and the origins and
practices of the phenomenological method.
Max van Manen offers an extensively updated edition of
Phenomenology of Practice: Meaning-Giving Methods in
Phenomenological Research and Writing to provide an eloquent,
accessible, and detailed approach to practicing phenomenology.
Phenomenology of practice refers to the meaning of doing
phenomenology on experiences that are of significance to those in
professional practice such as psychology, health care, education,
and in contexts of ordinary living. A special feature of this
update is the role of examples, anecdotes, stories, and vignettes,
and the singularity of fictionalized empirical fragments in making
the unknowable knowable. Accordingly, the various chapters are
enriched with many intelligible examples of phenomenological essays
and excursions on ordinary and extraordinary topics. These examples
show that a phenomenological method can be engaged to explore
virtually any lived experience or event. Max van Manen provides
penetrating portrayals of depthful insights by brilliant
phenomenologists. He identifies and distinguishes a variety of
phenomenological orientations that are alive and current today.
This book is relevant to scholars, students, and motivated readers
interested in the originary meanings and methods of
phenomenological human science enquiry. Max van Manen's
comprehensive work is of significance to all concerned with the
interrelation between being and acting, thoughtfulness and tact, in
human sciences research and the phenomenology of everyday life.
In The Tact of Teaching bestselling author Max van Manen offers
teachers at every stage an original and inspiring interpretation of
the notion of pedagogy, one that searches for its roots in the
experience of in loco parentis. Using dozens of anecdotes and
scenes taken directly from life in classrooms, including many from
the often-neglected domain of high school, The Tact of Teaching
explicates the meaning of pedagogical moments, the conditions of
pedagogy, the relation between pedagogy and politics, the nature of
pedagogical experience, and the practical forms of pedagogical
understanding. The author: -Presents experiential analysis of the
relation between pedagogical reflection and action-Explores how
pedagogical tact manifests itself, what tact accomplishes, and how
tact does what it does-Speaks of hope and humane practice in an era
of schooling often given over to mindless technocracy or
fashionable despair
Classic Writings for a Phenomenology of Practice features examples
of newly translated classic phenomenological texts that have been
largely forgotten or misunderstood. The writings are unique in that
they speak to the practice of doing phenomenological research for
the purpose of gaining insights and better understandings regarding
aspects of professional practice and ordinary life phenomena and
events. Phenomenology does not have to be impenetrable philosophy,
dealing with tedious technical issues. Instead, phenomenology may
offer relevance, value, and enduring allure to readers and
researchers who are engaged with the quotidian life experiences and
events of students, patients, clients, friends, and other
individuals. This phenomenological approach aims to stay as close
as possible to the ordinary events of everyday life: seeing the
first smile of a child, feeling compulsive, being humorous, having
a conversation, experiencing childhood secrecy, encountering new
things-topics that span a manifold of life experiences. In this
collection of classic phenomenological writings, each author is
thoughtfully introduced, and each text is followed by a
conversational descant: a reflection on the phenomenological
reflection. The presentation of these classic writings and their
reflections aims to show us what it means to do phenomenology
directly on the phenomena that we live-thus asking us to be
attentive to the fascinating varieties and subtleties of primal
lived experiences and consciousness in all its remarkable
complexities. This book is relevant for scholars and students who
are interested in human science research and the origins and
practices of the phenomenological method.
Pedagogical Tact describes how teacher-student relations possess an
improvisational and ethical character. The daily realities of
educators, parents, and childcare specialists are pedagogically
conditioned by sensitive insights, active thoughtfulness, and the
creative ability to act caringly and appropriately in the immediacy
of the moment. Internationally known educator Max van Manen shows
through recognizable examples and evocative stories how good
teaching is driven by the phenomenology of pedagogy. His
book-refocuses educators and others away from an emphasis on
instrumental skills and technocratic programs toward the need for
pedagogical tact;-describes how pedagogical actions have latent
effects that will influence children throughout their lives;-shows
how our actions with young people have pedagogically ethical and
moral significance;-gives educators back their original vocational
motivation and inspiration.
Max van Manen offers an extensively updated edition of
Phenomenology of Practice: Meaning-Giving Methods in
Phenomenological Research and Writing to provide an eloquent,
accessible, and detailed approach to practicing phenomenology.
Phenomenology of practice refers to the meaning of doing
phenomenology on experiences that are of significance to those in
professional practice such as psychology, health care, education,
and in contexts of ordinary living. A special feature of this
update is the role of examples, anecdotes, stories, and vignettes,
and the singularity of fictionalized empirical fragments in making
the unknowable knowable. Accordingly, the various chapters are
enriched with many intelligible examples of phenomenological essays
and excursions on ordinary and extraordinary topics. These examples
show that a phenomenological method can be engaged to explore
virtually any lived experience or event. Max van Manen provides
penetrating portrayals of depthful insights by brilliant
phenomenologists. He identifies and distinguishes a variety of
phenomenological orientations that are alive and current today.
This book is relevant to scholars, students, and motivated readers
interested in the originary meanings and methods of
phenomenological human science enquiry. Max van Manen's
comprehensive work is of significance to all concerned with the
interrelation between being and acting, thoughtfulness and tact, in
human sciences research and the phenomenology of everyday life.
Bestselling author Max van Manen's Writing in the Dark brings
together a wide range of studies of relevance to qualitative
researchers and professional practitioners. Each of the sixteen
original chapters by accomplished scholars serves as an example of
how a different kind of human experience may be explored, and of
how the methods used for investigating phenomena may contribute to
the process of human understanding. Van Manen provides the opening
and closing chapters for the book, and also an introduction to each
selection. This book is a valuable and rich resource for people who
would like to learn more about phenomenological reflection and
writing.Van Manen and his contributing authors:-Show how the
challenge of doing qualitative research can be pursued through the
process of inquiry, reflection and writing-Are from a variety of
fields such as education, health sciences, psychology, arts and
design, communication technology, and religious studies-Include
numerous recognizable human experiences including common ones,
forgotten ones, and ritualized ones
Bestselling author Max van Manen's Writing in the Dark brings
together a wide range of studies of relevance to qualitative
researchers and professional practitioners. Each of the sixteen
original chapters by accomplished scholars serves as an example of
how a different kind of human experience may be explored, and of
how the methods used for investigating phenomena may contribute to
the process of human understanding. Van Manen provides the opening
and closing chapters for the book, and also an introduction to each
selection. This book is a valuable and rich resource for people who
would like to learn more about phenomenological reflection and
writing.Van Manen and his contributing authors:-Show how the
challenge of doing qualitative research can be pursued through the
process of inquiry, reflection and writing-Are from a variety of
fields such as education, health sciences, psychology, arts and
design, communication technology, and religious studies-Include
numerous recognizable human experiences including common ones,
forgotten ones, and ritualized ones
In the revised and updated second edition of The Tone of Teaching,
bestselling author Max van Manen defines sound pedagogy as the
ability to distinguish effectively between what is appropriate, and
what is less appropriate in our communications and dealings with
children and young people as parents and educators. The author:
-Shows how tactful educators develop a caring attentiveness to the
unique; to the uniqueness of children, and to the uniqueness of
their individual lives-Describes how this "tone" of teaching can be
sustained by the cultivation of a certain kind of seeing,
listening, and responding to each child in each particular
situation-Offers practical insights for both educators and parents
Bestselling author Max van Manen's Researching Lived Experience
introduces a human science approach to research methodology in
education and related fields. The book takes as its starting point
the "everyday lived experience" of human beings in educational
situations. Rather than rely on abstract generalizations and
theories in the traditional sense, the author offers an alternative
that taps the unique nature of each human situation. First
published in 1990, this book is a classic of social science
methodology and phenomenological research, selling tens of
thousands of copies over the past quarter century. Left Coast is
making available the second edition of this work, never before
released outside Canada. Researching Lived Experience offers
detailed methodological explications and practical examples of
inquiry. It shows how to orient oneself to human experience in
education and how to construct a textual question which evokes a
fundamental sense of wonder, and it provides a broad and systematic
set of approaches for gaining experiential material which forms the
basis for textual reflections. The author: -Discusses the part
played by language in educational research-Pays special attention
to the methodological function of anecdotal narrative in
research-Offers approaches to structuring the research text in
relation to the particular kinds of questions being studied
In The Tact of Teaching bestselling author Max van Manen offers
teachers at every stage an original and inspiring interpretation of
the notion of pedagogy, one that searches for its roots in the
experience of in loco parentis. Using dozens of anecdotes and
scenes taken directly from life in classrooms, including many from
the often-neglected domain of high school, The Tact of Teaching
explicates the meaning of pedagogical moments, the conditions of
pedagogy, the relation between pedagogy and politics, the nature of
pedagogical experience, and the practical forms of pedagogical
understanding. The author: -Presents experiential analysis of the
relation between pedagogical reflection and action-Explores how
pedagogical tact manifests itself, what tact accomplishes, and how
tact does what it does-Speaks of hope and humane practice in an era
of schooling often given over to mindless technocracy or
fashionable despair
Pedagogical Tact describes how teacher-student relations possess an
improvisational and ethical character. The daily realities of
educators, parents, and childcare specialists are pedagogically
conditioned by sensitive insights, active thoughtfulness, and the
creative ability to act caringly and appropriately in the immediacy
of the moment. Internationally known educator Max van Manen shows
through recognizable examples and evocative stories how good
teaching is driven by the phenomenology of pedagogy. His
book-refocuses educators and others away from an emphasis on
instrumental skills and technocratic programs toward the need for
pedagogical tact;-describes how pedagogical actions have latent
effects that will influence children throughout their lives;-shows
how our actions with young people have pedagogically ethical and
moral significance;-gives educators back their original vocational
motivation and inspiration.
Max van Manen offers an extensive exploration of phenomenological
traditions and methods for the human sciences. It is his first
comprehensive statement of phenomenological thought and research in
over a decade. Phenomenology of practice refers to the meaning and
practice of phenomenology in professional contexts such as
psychology, education, and health care, as well as to the practice
of phenomenological methods in contexts of everyday living. Van
Manen presents a detailed description of key phenomenological ideas
as they have evolved over the past century; he then thoughtfully
works through the methodological issues of phenomenological
reflection, empirical methods, and writing that a phenomenology of
practice offers to the researcher. Van Manen's comprehensive work
will be of great interest to all concerned with the
interrelationship between being and acting in human sciences
research and in everyday life. Max van Manen is the editor of the
series Phenomenology of Practice,
https://www.routledge.com/series/PPVM
Max van Manen offers an extensive exploration of phenomenological
traditions and methods for the human sciences. It is his first
comprehensive statement of phenomenological thought and research in
over a decade. Phenomenology of practice refers to the meaning and
practice of phenomenology in professional contexts such as
psychology, education, and health care, as well as to the practice
of phenomenological methods in contexts of everyday living. Van
Manen presents a detailed description of key phenomenological ideas
as they have evolved over the past century; he then thoughtfully
works through the methodological issues of phenomenological
reflection, empirical methods, and writing that a phenomenology of
practice offers to the researcher. Van Manen's comprehensive work
will be of great interest to all concerned with the
interrelationship between being and acting in human sciences
research and in everyday life. Max van Manen is the editor of the
series Phenomenology of Practice,
https://www.routledge.com/series/PPVM
Este libro es un antidoto perfecto contra la preponderancia de los
textos psicologicos que suelen describir las interacciones adulto
nino como una serie de tareas y habilidades diferenciadas. A pesar
de que reconoce el papel de los enfoques pedagogicos tradicionales
basados en las habilidades, Van Manen trata abierta y directamente,
y sin reservas, las dimensiones de estas relaciones que la
psicologia no puede abarcar, entre las que fundamentalmente se
encuentra la dificil tarea de estar con los ninos para que la
maduracion sea posible. De este modo, presenta una vision original
sobre el significado y la practica de la ensenanza entendida como
una actividad reflexiva. Define la reflexion pedagogica como la
forma en que los educadores maduran, cambian y profundizan como
consecuencia del hecho de vivir con los ninos. Y muestra como los
procesos de ensenanza requieren tacto: inteligencia interpretativa,
intuicion moral practica, sensibilidad y receptividad hacia la
subjetividad de los ninos y capacidad de improvisacion en el trato
con ellos.
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