Description
Book SynopsisAs teaching is socially, culturally, and politically constructed, it is important that teacher educators committed to social justice attempt to create secure environment where all voices are heard and teacher candidates can inquire into personally and socially challenging topics within a safe and caring classroom culture. Relationships of trust are fundamental to teaching about social justice and to being receptive as learners in such classes. Mindfulness on the part of teacher educators and teacher candidates can go a long way in fostering respect, openness and acceptance in such classes. Together they can lead to teacher educators and candidates thinking deeply about themselves, schools and schooling as they move towards a vision of a more equitable and just society. The teacher educators who have contributed to this volume recognize the challenges of balancing respect for their students with the call to social justice. Their accounts and critical reflections convey how relational an
Trade ReviewIn an era of “hyper-busyness,” where there is misplaced value assigned to not being present to our own moments and the moments we share with others, there is a need to understand what it means to be mindful of simply being. In that light, professors Julian Kitchen, Karen Ragoonaden and their colleagues offer in the edited collection that comprises The Mindful and Relational Teacher Approaches to Social Justice in Teacher Education insights and understandings that allow all of us who are invested in initial teacher preparation to be and become more aware and attentive to how teacher education can be anchored in pathways that might allow us to live and learn in meaningful ways as single human family. -- Jerome Cranston, University of Regina
Table of ContentsForeword, Karen Ragoonaden Introduction, Julian Kitchen A Relational Approach to Social Justice in Teacher Education, Julian Kitchen Contemplating Mindfulness and Social Justice in Diversity Classrooms, Karen Ragoonaden Mindfulness and Relational Knowing: An International Novice Teacher Educator’s Approach to Teaching Social Justice, Yumei Li What Should Preservice Teachers Know about Race and Diversity? Exploring a Critical Knowledge-Base, Benedicta Egbo Transformative Frameworks for Promoting Social Justice: Mindful and Relational Teacher Education, Awneet Sivia Embedding Lived Indigenous Perspectives in Teacher Education: Co-constructing Mindful Pathways for Truth, Reconciliation and Social Justice, Terry-Lee Beaudry, Kevin Kaiser and Karen Ragoonaden A Relational Approach to Collaborative Research and Practice among Teacher Educators in Urban Contexts, Jane McIntosh Cooper, Leslie M. Gauna, Christine E. Beaudry and Gayle A. Curtis Responding to Cries of Pain through Literature: A Mindful Approach to Preparing to Teach Children of War, Barbara McNeil Conclusion, Karen Ragoonaden