Description

Book Synopsis
It has long been established that teaching and learning are autobiographical endeavours, so it follows that self-study is central to sound practice. As a framework, self-study allows researchers to use their experiences to examine self-in-practice with the aim of both personal and professional growth. By its very design, it makes transparent personal processes of inquiry by offering them up for public critique. This type of public inquiry of the personal happens in at least two ways: first, through the inclusion of trusted others who can provide different perspectives on our closely held discourses; and, second, through making our research publicly available so that others might learn from our inquiries. Self-study, then, requires openness to vulnerability as we continuously re/negotiate who we are as teachers. Approaching inquiry from this perspective has at its core deepened self-knowledge coupled with intent to transform praxis. This transformation is sought through integrated ways of being and teaching that support embodied wholeness of teachers and learners. Through critical, qualitative, creative, and arts-integrated approaches, this collection seeks to advance teacher self-study and, through it, transformative praxis. Contributors are: Willow S. Allen, Charity Becker, Yue Bian, Abby Boehm-Turner, Diane Burt, Vy Dao, Lee C. Fisher, Teresa Anne Fowler, Deborah Graham, Cher Hill, Chinwe H. Ikpeze, David Jardine, Elizabeth Kenyon, Jodi Latremouille, Carl Leggo, Ellyn Lyle, Sepideh Mahani, Jennifer Markides, Sherry Martens, Kate McCabe, Laura Piersol, Kathleen Pithouse-Morgan, Amanda C. Shopa, Timothy Sibbald, Sara K. Sterner, and Aaron Zimmerman.

Trade Review
“Why study yourself? Readers interested in personal and social meaning-making will be inspired by Lyle’s edited collection of essays and stories that invite a fuller understanding of self. Like the steady, quiet wisdom that breaks through the din, each chapter makes the self-inquiry processes accessible and transparent, and students will appreciate how authors have approached the curriculum of their lives as an opportunity for growth. Here is an opportunity to study ‘alone-together,’ to come into contact with vulnerable others who will help you to render self in new ways. In these times of disequilibrium, self-study has a pedagogical heart. For those who approach their scholarship as more of a passion than an activity, for those who recognize the self is contested, multiple, mixed, contradictory, and often obscured, in the pages of this text is an adventure of understanding.” – Sean Wiebe, Ph.D., Associate Professor (UPEI), Curriculum Scholar, and Poet

Fostering a Relational Pedagogy: Self-Study as

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    Order before 4pm today for delivery by Wed 17 Jun 2026.

    A Hardback by Ellyn Lyle

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      View other formats and editions of Fostering a Relational Pedagogy: Self-Study as by Ellyn Lyle

      Publisher: Brill
      Publication Date: 01/11/2018
      ISBN13: 9789004388857, 978-9004388857
      ISBN10: 9004388850

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      It has long been established that teaching and learning are autobiographical endeavours, so it follows that self-study is central to sound practice. As a framework, self-study allows researchers to use their experiences to examine self-in-practice with the aim of both personal and professional growth. By its very design, it makes transparent personal processes of inquiry by offering them up for public critique. This type of public inquiry of the personal happens in at least two ways: first, through the inclusion of trusted others who can provide different perspectives on our closely held discourses; and, second, through making our research publicly available so that others might learn from our inquiries. Self-study, then, requires openness to vulnerability as we continuously re/negotiate who we are as teachers. Approaching inquiry from this perspective has at its core deepened self-knowledge coupled with intent to transform praxis. This transformation is sought through integrated ways of being and teaching that support embodied wholeness of teachers and learners. Through critical, qualitative, creative, and arts-integrated approaches, this collection seeks to advance teacher self-study and, through it, transformative praxis. Contributors are: Willow S. Allen, Charity Becker, Yue Bian, Abby Boehm-Turner, Diane Burt, Vy Dao, Lee C. Fisher, Teresa Anne Fowler, Deborah Graham, Cher Hill, Chinwe H. Ikpeze, David Jardine, Elizabeth Kenyon, Jodi Latremouille, Carl Leggo, Ellyn Lyle, Sepideh Mahani, Jennifer Markides, Sherry Martens, Kate McCabe, Laura Piersol, Kathleen Pithouse-Morgan, Amanda C. Shopa, Timothy Sibbald, Sara K. Sterner, and Aaron Zimmerman.

      Trade Review
      “Why study yourself? Readers interested in personal and social meaning-making will be inspired by Lyle’s edited collection of essays and stories that invite a fuller understanding of self. Like the steady, quiet wisdom that breaks through the din, each chapter makes the self-inquiry processes accessible and transparent, and students will appreciate how authors have approached the curriculum of their lives as an opportunity for growth. Here is an opportunity to study ‘alone-together,’ to come into contact with vulnerable others who will help you to render self in new ways. In these times of disequilibrium, self-study has a pedagogical heart. For those who approach their scholarship as more of a passion than an activity, for those who recognize the self is contested, multiple, mixed, contradictory, and often obscured, in the pages of this text is an adventure of understanding.” – Sean Wiebe, Ph.D., Associate Professor (UPEI), Curriculum Scholar, and Poet

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