Teaching is a Human Interaction

How Thoughtful Educators Respond, Are Responsive, and Take Responsibility

Alexis L. Jones
Emerald
Emerald

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Paperback / softback
9798887301488
22 March 2023
£35.00
Hardback
9798887301495
22 March 2023
£65.00
eBook (ePub)
9781806602056
22 March 2023
£35.00
eBook (PDF)
9798887301501
22 March 2023
£35.00

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  • Description
  • Contents

This book contains an argument supported by education philosophers as well as composite stories, data, and personal experiences. The author mentions a number of scholars (e.g., Benjamin, 1988; Buber, 1970; Noddings, 2005, 2013; Palmer, 1983; van Manen, 1986, 1991, 2000) who address important human issues in the field of education, and she ties their work and hers to show common themes within the issues of care, responsivity, and relational ethics.

The first part of the book (Introduction and Chapters 1-3) is primarily philosophical, and the author shares the thoughts of the aforementioned scholars and others on topics relating to the very human work teachers do. The next section of the book (Chapters 4-6) combines theoretical works and empirical data to address the complexity and humanity of teaching.

While the work described in the aforementioned chapters may appear to present an idea of ethical teacher perfection, this is not the case. Teachers are not supposed to be, nor are they logistically able to be, all things to all children. The final chapter instead addresses how stakeholders (e.g., educators, administrators, parents) can gently move our traditional education system toward this ideal. This conclusion shares the ways teachers and teacher educators can conceptualize the work on teaching-as-human-interaction and use it to improve the teaching perception.

Introduction.

  • Chapter 1. Care and Relational Knowing.
  • Chapter 2. Relational Ethics: Leading the Child.
  • Chapter 3. Nice Versus Kind.
  • Chapter 4. Being and Becoming.
  • Chapter 5. Noticing, Attunement, Recognition, and Being Seen.
  • Chapter 6. Once Confronted, the One-Caring Must Respond.
  • Chapter 7. Imperfections: A Need for Reflection and Introspection.
  • References.
  • About the Author.