The document provides a book review of Parker Palmer's book "The Courage to Teach". It summarizes that Palmer believes teaching involves not just knowledge transfer but also the teacher's inner life. He explains teaching has intellectual, emotional, and spiritual components. The book encourages teachers to embrace their identity and integrity rather than suppress themselves. It also emphasizes the importance of community for teaching, discussing three community models. The review concludes that the book inspired self-reflection in the reviewer and reinforced the importance of identity and community for effective teaching.
The document provides a book review of Parker Palmer's book "The Courage to Teach". It summarizes that Palmer believes teaching involves not just knowledge transfer but also the teacher's inner life. He explains teaching has intellectual, emotional, and spiritual components. The book encourages teachers to embrace their identity and integrity rather than suppress themselves. It also emphasizes the importance of community for teaching, discussing three community models. The review concludes that the book inspired self-reflection in the reviewer and reinforced the importance of identity and community for effective teaching.
The document provides a book review of Parker Palmer's book "The Courage to Teach". It summarizes that Palmer believes teaching involves not just knowledge transfer but also the teacher's inner life. He explains teaching has intellectual, emotional, and spiritual components. The book encourages teachers to embrace their identity and integrity rather than suppress themselves. It also emphasizes the importance of community for teaching, discussing three community models. The review concludes that the book inspired self-reflection in the reviewer and reinforced the importance of identity and community for effective teaching.
The document provides a book review of Parker Palmer's book "The Courage to Teach". It summarizes that Palmer believes teaching involves not just knowledge transfer but also the teacher's inner life. He explains teaching has intellectual, emotional, and spiritual components. The book encourages teachers to embrace their identity and integrity rather than suppress themselves. It also emphasizes the importance of community for teaching, discussing three community models. The review concludes that the book inspired self-reflection in the reviewer and reinforced the importance of identity and community for effective teaching.
Evan Faidley A Book Review on The Courage to Teach: Exploring the Inner Landscape of a Teachers Life By Parker Palmer Kent State University
Book Review on The Courage to Teach 2
Teaching is more than just the technique and transfer of knowledge; Palmer (2007) provides a lens into such a framework by welcoming the reader to explore the teachers inner life and [h]ow can the teachers selfhood become a legitimate topic in education and in our public dialogues on educational reform (p. 3). Palmer begins to explain the concept of teaching in three parts (p. 5): intellectual, the way we think about teaching; emotional, which is the way the teacher/student is feeling during the lesson; and spiritualthe diverse ways we connect with life. In The Courage to Teach, teacher readers participate in an inner journey toward reconnecting their vocation and their students. Cornerstones of the book are talking about the teachers identity and integrity. Eliminating the mindset that teaching is purely pedagogical technique, the facet of identity constitutes everything that makes usfrom genetics to deeds. Integrity is referred to as the acceptance of all that one is, which coincides with identity. In academia, it is promoted that teachers need to split their sense of person from practice, thus suppressing the self to teach to societys standards. Rather than dividing the self, it is encourages to embrace the emotional and spiritual connections within ones self. By doing so, the teacher becomes truly present in the classroom and may deeply engage with their students and their subject. Among the reading, there are two truths about teaching: (1) what we teach will not take until it connects with t eh core of the student and (2) we can only connect to the core of the student when we speak to the teacher within ourselves. The complexities of connecting with students supplement to the teachers inner development and finding ones self, thus learning techniques that reveal rather than conceal the personhood from which good teaching derives. Teachers choose to become teachers for several reasons: the passion of a subject, the desire to share such a passion with others, tend to the development of knowledge I others or an interest in shaping the next generation. To effectively do so, Palmer emphasizes the importance of having heart while performing such tasks if the teacher should want to be authentic and influential on others and to retain their identity and integrity. Fear is an eminent element to the realm of teaching. It cripples learning, either in the student or the teacher. People fear encounters in which the other is free to be themselves because it is of human nature to want to be able to control those encounters on our own terms, otherwise to avoid a threat on out self-view. Examples of avoiding such a threat would be students hiding behind books; teachers behind podiums and desks; and faculty behind specialties. By
Book Review on The Courage to Teach 3
understanding ones fear, we overcome the disconnection with the power of self-knowledge and with the relationships between teacher and student. Palmer concentrates on the incorporation of paradoxical concepts within education. The majority of people think the world apart because we are trained to not voice both sides of an issue and not to listen with both ears. Its always an either-or argument rather than a bothand. As an example, an individual is either a teacher or a counselor, not both a teacher and a counselor. This framework ties into Palmers explanation of the six paradoxes: The space should be bounded and open. There needs to be space for questions but the discussion needs boundaries. The space should be hospitable and charged. An open space needs to be hospitable so it is not forbidding, however it also needs to be challenging. The space should invite the voice of the individual and the group. The space should honor the little stories of the students and the big stories of the disciplines and tradition. The space should support solitude, and surround it with the resources of the community. The space should welcome both silence and speech. Among the development of teaching and learning, community also proves to play a role. Palmer explores three different community models: therapeutic, civic and marketing. Palmer states that the therapeutic model places intimacy at the highest value, serving as the best therapy for the pain of disconnection. This model exploits the trend that teaching and learning are decreased when the therapeutic principles are the norm, because we need a standard more encompassing than intimacy by which to affirm a relationship. The civic model focuses on a wide range of relations among strangers; Palmer explains that the civic model is pivotal to teaching as it engages people of different backgrounds in common work. The marketing model indicates that educational institutions must improve their product by strengthening relations with customers and becoming more accountable to them. Palmer discusses in detail the subject of reality and finding truth through community and the intricate methods of doing so, including: inviting diversity into community, embracing ambiguity for the inadequacy of our understanding of great things, creative conflict to correct our biases about the nature of great things, etc. Palmer concludes these ideas in a discussion of our knowledge of things around us that are great and sacred and explains why we need to come to a fuller understanding of them. Palmer goes on to continue to explain the importance of community in teaching. He also goes on to explain the effectiveness of a subject-centered education. In this type of education, the
Book Review on The Courage to Teach 4
focus of the class is not revolved around the students or the teaching, but rather on making the classroom about the subject. In this type of classroom, it is encouraged for students to use their own knowledge and contradict the teacher and ask questions. This can be shown by servicelearning programs or by means of digital technology. They have the freedom to learn on their own and experience their education in different ways which makes them more interested and engaged in the subject. Palmer states that as teachers, we should not occupy all the space with knowledge, but to leave some open space for the students to learn on their own and expand on their thought. By teaching this way, you serve both the subject and student by feeding them with bits of knowledge and then showing them where the information came from and what it means. Palmer goes on to explain how people question the theory of a learning community because they say it cannot exist with the division of power between the student and teacher; the real struggle is the lack of interdependence in the student teacher relationship. Both student and teacher should rely on each other to create the ideal community. The faculty community must communicate with each other to grow and learn as teachers. Palmer states that if we want to grow in the practice of education, one must go to the inner ground from which teaching comes from and to the community of fellow teachers from whom we can learn more about ourselves and our craft. The only way to effectively evaluate a teacher is to be there. The ground rules are to not try to fix everyones problem when in conversation but let the person resolve their issue on their own but be there to listen. Ask questions and give your undivided attention without making it about yourself or giving advice. Finally, we need a leader to initiate this conversation and provide occasions where teachers among themselves or with students can discuss their concerns. Palmer finishes by saying that this conversation is necessary for a teacher to grow and learn about their trade and when we lead and communicate, we all have a chance to heal and lead a new life, thus inferring that learning is for the benefit of everyone. Palmer identifies the idea of creating movements to transform society. There are four stages discussed in the process for a movement to happen. These stages are not always sequential, but they can happen simultaneously. In stage one, due to a situation one may be struggling with, the individual makes a decision to live divided no more (p. 166). Stage two, the individuals form communities of congruence. In stage three, these communities learn to grow a voice and start going public. In stage four, a system of alternative rewards emerges to sustain the movements vision and to put pressure for change on the standard institutional reward
Book Review on The Courage to Teach 5
system (p. 166). To bring about a transformative teaching experience, it is necessary to work as a collective community and aspire to make necessary changes for the amelioration of ones self and the life of others. To optimize ones self as a teacher, it is not only focused on instruction technique, but rather the internal and external forces that drive the passion, reasoning and support of becoming not only a teacher, but a good teacher. As I reviewed the text, I found myself to grow not only in my instructional technique, but in realizing who I am, why I teach, and how I teach; this ultimately has led me to reflect on what kind of environment and relationship I desire with my comrades, whether they be student, faculty or staff. As an intermediary of knowledge and happiness, I am guided by my identity and integrity, as well as the self-reward of teaching and collaborating with others. From self-reflections and the support of others, it has become evident that I do indeed have the courage to teach and contribute to the differences in the world that I seek to make.
Book Review on The Courage to Teach 6
References Palmer, P. J. (2007). The courage to teach: Exploring the inner landscape of a teacher's life. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass.