Description
Book SynopsisIndirect Education discusses direct and indirect pedagogies and the complexities of these concepts within the field of education practice and research. It addresses the question of when it is most beneficial to be indirect with regard to teaching and educational research.
The book offers an original approach to education in how it reasserts our right to a sense of ownership and agency in educational explorations. It argues that there should be space for indirect ways of teaching and communication when matters without clear answers and objectives enter the educational sphere. Bringing together a mix of empirical studies presented with a degree of storytelling, the book explores the literature of educational theory to make a novel and relatable argument for making space for indirectness in learning contexts.
Putting forward a compelling case that is necessary for education in the difficult times that we are living in, the book will appeal to academ
Table of Contents
Introduction. Expanding the forms of education
1 Justification. Education is indirect by nature—so what’s the problem?
2 Teaching. Four forms of teaching. Excerpts from observations at a secondary school
3 Communication. Janus-faced forms of indirect communication. Teacher interview and thought experiments
4 Ethics. Where is the boundary between the ethical and the unethical regarding teachers’ indirect actions? A case study
5 Time. How may ‘genuine time’ be an integral element in student’s existence? A case study
6 Education research. The direct and indirect paths of education research
7.The educational researcher. Ironic indirection and the 'I' in education research
Afterword. The wisdom of teachers. A conversation with three teachers