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Details the positive impact that community-based organizations can have in rebuilding the lives of urban black youth, through a process the author calls radical healing. This book shows readers how caring adults in a community setting are able to create safe spaces for youth to turn away from neighborhood violence and their own traumatic pasts.
The authors, one an urban public school teacher in Boston and the other a professor of education at Boston College, define and articulate the idea of alienated teaching and offer a means to counter it. Alienated teaching is what teachers do when they
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Produktbeschreibung
Details the positive impact that community-based organizations can have in rebuilding the lives of urban black youth, through a process the author calls radical healing. This book shows readers how caring adults in a community setting are able to create safe spaces for youth to turn away from neighborhood violence and their own traumatic pasts.
The authors, one an urban public school teacher in Boston and the other a professor of education at Boston College, define and articulate the idea of alienated teaching and offer a means to counter it. Alienated teaching is what teachers do when they feel that they must comply with external conditions that they have not chosen and from which they inwardly dissent because they do not believe that new policies and reforms serve their students well. Funded by a grant from the Boston Collaborative Fellows, the authors examine the effects of top-down policy mandates on classroom teachers. Mindful teaching is a way for teachers to learn how to incorporate appropriately, reforms and mandates into their practice. Mindful teaching promotes openness to new ideas and new perspectives via discussion in a collegial group committed to teacher inquiry. It promotes quiet and thoughtful articulation about professional commitment and beliefs. The authors are strong proponents of teachers becoming teacher leaders in order to work through the issues of mandates, teaching to the text, etc.
Autorenporträt
Shawn A. Ginwright is Associate Professor of Africana Studies and Senior Research Associate at the Cesar Chavez Institute for Public Policy at San Francisco State University. Visit his website at www.shawnginwright.com.