This work goes beyond the basics of classroom management to consider the path of both teacher and student toward authentic intellectual maturity and spiritual growth. It provides a framework for stripping away the external and personal pressures that bleed intellectual content out of classroom teaching so that teachers may, in fact, experience their vocation as sublime. Written in the novelistic first-person narrative, it is a seasoned teacher's story of his initiation from graduate student at the University of Chicago to ninth-grade teacher in a Catholic high school where he manned the battle lines in provincial, petty, sometime even violent world of American secondary school. It is also the story of how a certain Brother Blake, a 67-year-old practitioner of the pedagogy of the sublime, passed on his vision of classroom teaching as a sublime vocation. A major contribution to the field by the acclaimed author of The Ignorant Perfection of Ordinary People.
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This work goes beyond the basics of classroom management to consider the path of both teacher and student toward authentic intellectual maturity and spiritual growth.
Acknowledgments Introduction Vocation or Provocation? The Dialectics of Discipline Breakthrough The Lost Art Classroom Praxis from A to B Ceremonies Sacred and Profane Attempting the Impossible Teaching Social Science Teaching English Composition Teaching Social Justice Teaching Sex Education Teaching Literature Higher Education Program Notes Maxims, Aphorisms, Insights and Reflections Selected Reading Index
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This book is a practitioner's confession, limited in scope and qualified by circumstance, that nevertheless aspires to be an inspirational yet tough-minded intellectual survival manual for classroom teachers.
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780897893794
Publisert
1993-10-26
Utgiver
Vendor
Praeger Publishers Inc
Aldersnivå
UU, UP, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
198

Forfatter

Om bidragsyterne

ROBERT INCHAUSTI is Professor of English at California Polytechnic State University. His earlier work, The Ignorant Perfection of Ordinary People, examines the lives of six visionaries: Mother Teresa, Lech Walesa, Martin Luther King, Gandhi, Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, and Elie Wiesel.