Pedagogy: A Teacher’s Practice

Neoliberal assaults upon public education have been grounded upon the supposition that schools are failing to prepare students to respond to local and global economic needs and realities. The result has left the relational between pupils and teachers as a taken-for-granted practice. Lived experience...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Andrew Foran, Dan Robinson, Margareth Eilifsen, Elizabeth Munro, Tess Thurber
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Alberta 2020-06-01
Series:Phenomenology & Practice
Online Access:https://journals.library.ualberta.ca/pandpr/index.php/pandpr/article/view/29397
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spelling doaj-e235e8102c854b64a63bf6dd3f9c209c2020-11-25T02:52:42ZengUniversity of AlbertaPhenomenology & Practice1913-47112020-06-01141395610.29173/pandpr2939729397Pedagogy: A Teacher’s PracticeAndrew ForanDan RobinsonMargareth EilifsenElizabeth MunroTess ThurberNeoliberal assaults upon public education have been grounded upon the supposition that schools are failing to prepare students to respond to local and global economic needs and realities. The result has left the relational between pupils and teachers as a taken-for-granted practice. Lived experiences often can show and capture the unexpressed in taken for granted moments. This discussion presents teaching as relational moments, shared between beginning teachers and pupils. We employ a phenomenological sensitivity as we unravel the anecdotal evidence to bring into language a “lived through” dimension of human relations. As teacher educators, we ask: what is experienced when relationality is the focus for beginning teachers? The importance of this question is due to the prevalence of neoliberal forces that now guide, and to large extent, control what it means to teach in schools across Canada. In an effort to understand this emerging view of teaching, we explore what four preservice teachers from Nova Scotia experienced in becoming teachers, as they completed their final Field Experience in Bergen, Norway. We share these anecdotal representations to help teachers see how the relational informs identity in becoming a teacher and allows teacher educators to deconstruct the “taken-for-granted-ness” of teaching stuck in the rational-technical model.https://journals.library.ualberta.ca/pandpr/index.php/pandpr/article/view/29397
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Andrew Foran
Dan Robinson
Margareth Eilifsen
Elizabeth Munro
Tess Thurber
spellingShingle Andrew Foran
Dan Robinson
Margareth Eilifsen
Elizabeth Munro
Tess Thurber
Pedagogy: A Teacher’s Practice
Phenomenology & Practice
author_facet Andrew Foran
Dan Robinson
Margareth Eilifsen
Elizabeth Munro
Tess Thurber
author_sort Andrew Foran
title Pedagogy: A Teacher’s Practice
title_short Pedagogy: A Teacher’s Practice
title_full Pedagogy: A Teacher’s Practice
title_fullStr Pedagogy: A Teacher’s Practice
title_full_unstemmed Pedagogy: A Teacher’s Practice
title_sort pedagogy: a teacher’s practice
publisher University of Alberta
series Phenomenology & Practice
issn 1913-4711
publishDate 2020-06-01
description Neoliberal assaults upon public education have been grounded upon the supposition that schools are failing to prepare students to respond to local and global economic needs and realities. The result has left the relational between pupils and teachers as a taken-for-granted practice. Lived experiences often can show and capture the unexpressed in taken for granted moments. This discussion presents teaching as relational moments, shared between beginning teachers and pupils. We employ a phenomenological sensitivity as we unravel the anecdotal evidence to bring into language a “lived through” dimension of human relations. As teacher educators, we ask: what is experienced when relationality is the focus for beginning teachers? The importance of this question is due to the prevalence of neoliberal forces that now guide, and to large extent, control what it means to teach in schools across Canada. In an effort to understand this emerging view of teaching, we explore what four preservice teachers from Nova Scotia experienced in becoming teachers, as they completed their final Field Experience in Bergen, Norway. We share these anecdotal representations to help teachers see how the relational informs identity in becoming a teacher and allows teacher educators to deconstruct the “taken-for-granted-ness” of teaching stuck in the rational-technical model.
url https://journals.library.ualberta.ca/pandpr/index.php/pandpr/article/view/29397
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