133 57 16MB
English Pages [280] Year 2007
.
10*1 \
PALMER
:
anniversary
I
tsafei.
INNER of a TEACHER’S LIFE
the
CD
—
Included
A conversation with Parker
J.
Palmer
THE
COURAGE TO
TEACH “A profoundly moving, utterly passionate, and inspired
articulation of the call to,
pain and joy for
teaching.
of,
any and every
It is
teacher, at
and the
must reading
any
level.”
-JON KABAT'ZINN author of Wherever You Go, There You Are'
For nearly forty years, Parker Palmer has
worked on behalf of teachers and
others
who
choose vocations for reasons of the heart but
may
lose heart because of the troubled,
sometimes toxic systems in which they work.
Hundreds of thousands of readers have benefited from The Courage to Teach, which on an inner journey toward
takes teachers
reconnecting with themselves, their students,
and
their colleagues,
and toward reclaiming
vocational passion.
The Courage
Teach builds
to
on
simple
a
premise: good teaching cannot be reduced to
technique but
is
rooted in the identity and
integrity of the teacher.
Good
teaching takes
myriad fontis but good teachers share one
trait:
they are authentically present in the classroom,
deeply connected with their students and their subject.
These connections are held
the teacher’s heart
emotion, self.
spirit,
Good
— the
place
where
weave
a
intellect,
human life-giving web
and converge
teachers
in
(Continued on back flap)
in the
Digitized by the Internet Archive in
2017 with funding from
China-America
Digital
Academic
Library
(CADAL)
https://archive.org/details/isbn_9780787996864
m,
U
«
1
«
CRITICAL ACCLAIM FOR The Courage “This a
is
the best education
book
I’ve
powerful argument lor the need
nique toward
a learning
ops the deepest
we remember
human
that
it’s
to
to
Teach
.
.
.
read in a long time. Palmer provides
move from our
environment
overreliance on tech-
that both honors
capacities in children
and
teachers.
makes
book
is
just a chore,
not for you.
It’s
about time
the case eloquently.’’
— is
truly devel-
the person within the teacher that matters most in
education, and Palmer
“If teaching
and
You
and you are content
will be challenged to
Teacher magazine
to just ‘do chores,’ this
go beyond the
minimum
and pursue excellence. But rather than approaching teaching thing
we
just tolerate,
as
some-
Parker Palmer holds out the promise of it being
something we can celebrate.”
—Academy of Management “Wisdom
Who
literatures
have brought us important insight over the years.
thought more deeply about teaching and learning than Alfred
North Whitehead.^
two or three
years.
I
I
reread his short book The Aims of Education
.
.
.
every
think also of the wonderful books on teaching from
Gilbert Highet and Kenneth Eble. And, good as any of these, Parker Palmer’s The Courage to TeachT
— Theodore
J.
Marchese, vice president,
American Association
“Parker Palmer that this
anyone
book
who
journey for
is
is
a
a teacher’s teacher,
and
it is
for
Higher Education
when he
writes as a teacher
remarkably inspiring, almost religious companion
for
has taught or might be thinking of teaching as a vocational
life.
This book can change your
life if
you are
—
a teacher.”
Religious Education
‘management consultant’ whenever the hook says ‘teacher.’ With that, most all of it works and is |T|his is a book of philosophy, a book on character, on the useful. kind of people it takes to be great management consultants. No plati-
“I
recommend .
.
this
hook.
.
.
.
Just substitute
.
tudes; rather, a serious exploration into the heart
and soul of teaching
by an eloquent and thoughtful master. Serious, yet completely understandable and engrossing.”
—lounial of Management Consulting ‘‘Through
a series
of vignettes. Palmer encourages reHection and strives
to bolster readers’ initiative
awakening, and all
levels
and
and confidence. The Courage
Teach
to
is
an
touch that reaches out to teachers of
a gentle, directive
ages.”
— Childhood Education ‘‘This
book provides
a great deal of insight
and new ideas on good teach-
ing which cannot be reduced to techniques because identity
and
integrity of the teachers.
on the thread of connectedness. in a
.
. .
The book
it
comes from the
balances the concerns
ITlhe spiritual dimension
unique way by relating with other
—
is
explored
fields of study.”
International journal on World Peace
‘‘With The Courage to Teach, Parker Palmer challenges us to recall our original motives for
becoming
teachers,
and he seeks
to
guide us
in the
process of reclaiming the sense of vocation capable of sustaining us in that striving.”
— ‘‘It
takes courage to teach
courage.^ This question
framed ents
in
is
in
today’s schools.
seldom asked and,
if
But what kind of
asked
at all,
and defending the profession against government is
an affair of the heart
change. For, as Parker Palmer argues in The Courage is
about commitment and connections.
among
is
usually
terms of violence prevention, dealing with overzealous par-
read that educational courage
ing
Transformations
It
is
is
spite.
a
So
welcome
to Teach, teach-
about relationships
students and subjects and the world that connects both.
about living and learning. Ultimately
it is
to
about the kind of
It is
commu-
nity necessary in classrooms for authentic education to take place.
And
the key to this kind of education
is
the
human
—
heart.”
Catholic
New
Times
From
and
leaders, teachers, thiiil^ers,
“To go on
this
of ‘the self
in
perspective.
writers
.
.
.
journey with Parker Palmer into the uncharted territory teaching
It is
not only viewing teaching horn a thrilling
is
also to he in the presence of a great teacher
new
who, hy
sha ring himself so openly and honestly, engages us in the very kind of
teaching he so eloquently describes.'”
^Russell E,dgerton, director
Pew
of educational
Charitable Trusts, and past president,
American Association
“A profoundly moving, and every
teacher, at
any
teaching.
of,
for
Higher Education
and inspired articulation
utterly passionate,
and the pain and joy
the call to,
programs.
It is
must reading
for
of
any
level.”
— Jon Kabat-Zinn,
author. Wherever You Go,
There You Are, and coauthor. Everyday Blessings
“This
l'K)ok is
for
of us
all
gcxH news
—
not just for classroom teachers and educators, but
who are committed
to the healing
— Joanna Macy, anyone
else.
officials,
author. World as Lover, World as Self
me more
“Parker Palmer has taught
The Courage
to
of our w^orld.”
about learning and teaching than
Teach
is
for all of us
counselors, as well as teachers.
It
of
who we
“This
is
a
].
do good work springs
Wheatley, author. Leadership and
New Science,
profoundly satisfying
insis-
are.”
— Margaret the
leaders, public
compassionately and
tently asks us to recognize that our capacity to
from our recognition
—
feast of a
and coauthor, A Simpler Way
hook
— —
of elegance and rigor, passion, and precision
written with a rare mix a gift to all
who
love
teaching and learning.”
— Diana Cdiapman Walsh, “Evokes the heart of what teachers pelling,
president, Wellesley Ck)llege
really do,
and does so
in a vivid,
com-
and soulful way.”
— Robert
Ck)les,
University Health Services,
Harvard University
OTHER BOOKS PARKER
J.
BY
PALMER
The Promise of Paradox
The Company of Strangers To
Know as We Are Known The Active Life Let Your Life Speal{
A Hidden The Courage
to
Wholeness
Teach Guide for Reflection and Renewal
iSJOSSEY'BASS
The Courage Teach
to
EXPLORING THE INNER LANDSCAPE OF A teacher's
life
Tenth Anniversary Edition
Parker
J.
Palmer
BICENTENNIAL j
r
John Wiley & Sons
© ©
C'opyright
(d)-R( )M
1W8, 2007 by john Wiley & Sons, Inc. All rights reserved. 2007 by ('enter for ('ourage & Renewal. All rights reserved.
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Palmer, Parker
The courage Parker p.
J.
I.
to teach
Palmer.
—
:
exploring the inner landscape of a teacher’s
10th anniversary ed.
cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN- 13: 978-0-7879-9686-4 1.
To
317-572-3986, or fax 317-572-4002.
lossey-Bass also publishes
/
was written
Teachers.
2.
LB1775.P25
Teaching.
3.
(cloth)
Learning.
1.
Title.
2007
371.1—dc22
2007016100 United States of America
Printed
in the
TENTH
.\NNI\'ERS,\RY EDITION
Hli Printing .10 9
876543
life
content that appears
Contents
Foreword
to the
Tenth Anniversary Edition
Gratitudes
xix
Introduction: Teaching from Within I
The Heart of a in
II
1
Teacher;tid^ntj tY^!a^
Teaching
9
A Culture ofT^ea^f^ducation
and the
DisconnectedHife III
35
The Hidden Wholeness: Paradox
in
Teaching
and Learning
IV
Knowing
in
63
Community: Joined by
the
Grace
of Great Things
V
Teaching
in
91
Community:
A
Subject-Centered
Education
VI
Learning
in
117
Community: The Conversation
of Colleagues
VII
Divided
ix
No More:
145
Teaching from a Heart
of Hope
169
vii
Afterword:
The New
Professional:
Education for Transformation
191
Notes
215
The Author
225
The Center About
the
for
Courage & Renewal
CD
227 229
Index
231
Vlll
Foreword
to the
Tenth Anniversary Edition
During
the decade
me
took
it
to write
The Courage
ing the Inner Landscape of a Teachers Life,
spent
I
to Teach:
Explor-
many hours pon-
dering the past and peering into the future.
My
Buddhist friends
me
tell
Every wisdom tradition urges us nal
now,” not
past
in the illusion
to
this
is
not a good
way
to live.
dwell in the reality of the “eter-
of what once was or might be.
and future are sources no writer can do without,
And
yet,
rich as they are
memory and fantasy, which calls into question the credibility anyone who writes about the inner life, not least myself! with
But the truth
is
that
wrote
I
this
thirty years in education, trying to
always thrilled and
terrified
of this teacher’s
hoping
spiritual out.
I
life,
to find
ways
the practice of anyone
stand
I
wrote,
good
wh ^
I
was
why
teaching had
to clarify the intellectual, emotional,
and
to
deepen the self-understanding and thus about teaching as
much
as
life,
m u st
I
hoped
live
to
—and
fi
do.
do more than make the
examined
li
v es
and
try to
animates their actions for better and for worse.
impact of our
cational externals
I
also looking ahead. In the midst of a culture
te achers
to anticipate the
testing
understand
was exploring the inner landscape
I
who cares
that devalues the inner case that
book while looking back on
dynamics that form or deform our work from the inside
wanted
As
me.
of
— including
nd ways
society’s
and mindless standardized
and support the inner journey
the heart of authentic teaching, learning,
IX
wanted
growing obsession with edu-
relentless
to protect
1
unde r-
and
living.
at
— As the the
past recedes,
we can
me
Teach has helped
to
more
see
So writing
clearly
how
this
book
me a of my predictions and the aptness of my
emerged from my own teaching experience. chance to check the accuracy
It
has also given
prescriptions for a future that at the time this book lished
it.
for this tenth anniversary edition of
Foreword and Afterword
The Courage
gain perspective on
was
first
pub-
consisted of events that had “not yet gone through the for-
still
mality of taking place.”'
Prehistory Revisited Because
began writing The Courage
I
was published, me. In
fact,
during
much
of which
it
anniversary feels more like a twen-
this book’s tenth
tieth to
Teach a decade before
to
throughout the book’s decade-long prehistory I
had only
swarm of half-baked
a title, a
heaps of scrap paper covered with scribbled notes, and page
ideas,
after
page of unusable text
book
in progress that
—
gave so many talks referring
I
some people got
the impression
it
to
was
my
a fait
accompli. I
row
can
my
get
I
amused when
from
That fact that
a living,
took
am
I
I
it
tell
to Teach,
wished
that
a very
I
decade
a
too,
I,
callers
it
anywhere.
were generally not
had
I
trying to bor-
a
copy but that
we
actually wrote the thing.
to write this
slow writer.
am
is
can’t find
I
them
me I
but
My
to wait until
them
“Someone
librarians:
hands on one.^”
told
I
would both have
a
calls
copy of The Courage
a
How
began getting
When
a rewriter.
I
book
is
people ask
doubt that
I
due
partly to the
me what do I
for
have ever published
page that has not been refried eight or ten or twelve times. As
true of
mit or
it
many
writers,
to paper.
know
The
But the
giving
do not begin with
a clear idea
very act of writing helps
me
and then com-
discover what
I
feel
about something, and since each succeeding draft drives
that discovery a
due only
I
is
to
me
little
deeper,
fact that
my
it
took
slow hand.
I
it is
me
hard to a
know when
decade
also credit a
to stop.
to write this
book
is
not
generous providence for
time to accrue and assimilate two experiences without
which the book would have been
•
less
grounded,
less
X
Foreword to the Tenth Anniversary Edition
honest, and
hence
less helpful.
Today
I
Of
One
was
of these
count both of them
as blessings.
course, the failure did not feel like a blessing at the time.
Four years before The Courage book was
gleam
my
eye
Teach was published, while the
to
—
or a stone in
my
depending
shoe,
still
a
—
spent a year as the Eli Lilly Visiting Professor at Berea
on the day
I
in
College in Kentucky. By the end of that year, of two things related to for
other a success.
a failure, the
me) and why
humility as
I
I
book:
this
needed
why
the
title
I
had been reminded
was on
target (at least,
about teaching with as
to write
much
could muster.
Berea College has served the young people of Appalachia since 1855. Its liberal arts
program
is
offered tuition-free to students from
one of the most impoverished regions of the United
whom
are given
finance their
on-campus
jobs to help operate the college
education.
had
own
graduate school days the 1960s,
when
at the
I
year
As an
I
of poverty. Teaching
taught
at
for the
dents and me, and
who had
I
— frequently Worse
is
at a college
with a
vocational wish
a cliche
worth attending
my
failed because still,
I
to teach across
key concept
a
I
was slow
life.
my
it.
stu-
The Courage
in
I
My own to
lacked personal knowledge of to
acknowledge and repair
my
ignorance.
These professional struggles were amplified by personal and
to.
only read about Appalachia,
was often unable
—
social
list.
depth of the culture gap between
“capacity for connectedness”
own
my
Berea ever since
Berea was one of the most difficult of
affluent northerner
“the other.”
my
had long been high on
was unprepared
Teach
to
University of California at Berkeley in
“Be careful what you wish for”
The
drawn
felt
and
higher education was roundly and rightly criticized
for ignoring the victims
justice mission
States, all of
as
I
insist in this
the professional. as light. In the
“We
loss,
book, the personal can never be divorced from teach
who we
middle of my year
subzero January morning,
I
are” in times of darkness as well
at Berea, in the
learned that
my
small hours of a
beloved father had sud-
denly and unexpectedly died. Far removed from the consolation of family and old friends,
Every day of
my
I
was devastated.
second semester
at
Berea
mountain of personal grief and professional
I
failure to
xi
Foreword
to the
had
Tenth Anniversary FAition
to
climb
a
drag myself
hack into the classroom while “the courage riowecl in
me, mostly ehhing.
or money, hut
thy for teachers tains as
it is
My
me
left
it
whose
would not repeat
I
that year for
fame
with a pearl of great price: deepened empa-
work
daily
is
much about climhing moun-
as
about teaching and learning.
other pivotal experience during the ten-year prehistory of
The Courage
to
Teach was an unqualified success, not because of
hut because of the people with
whom
shared
I
1996, at the request of the Fetzer Institute financial
and
to teach” ehhecl
and
staff support,
I
it.
From
and with
its
designed and facilitated
a
me
1994 to
generous
program
“The Courage to Teach.” Working with twenty-two K— 12 became an “inwardteachers from southwestern Michigan, hound” guide, helping them explore the inner landscape of their
called
I
through eight quarterly retreats of three days each, following
lives
the cycle of the seasons.
Technically,
me.
I
led this
program. Truthfully, those teachers led
learned lasting lessons from them about the discouraging,
and sometimes cruel conditions
oppressive, lic
I
school teachers
in
which too many pub-
must work; about the willingness
of these
good
people to look within themselves for sustenance instead of waiting
someone to supply it; about the heart-deep commitment that keeps them coming back to the classroom their commitment to the for
—
well-being of our children.
My
me
two-year journey with public school teachers persuaded
beyond doubt that they and
their kin are
among
the true culture
heroes of our time. Daily they must deal with children
been damaged by
social pathologies that
no one
their classrooms,
and
failures.
And
have
else has the will to
cure. Daily they are berated by politicians, the public, for their alleged inadequacies
who
and the press
daily they return to
opening their hearts and minds
in
hopes of helping
children do the same.
The hard with teachers
times
in the
I
had with teaching and the good times
decade before The Courage
lished helpecD^ae write this
The wo rd^^jT^s/h^ j ng or both
.
book from
a place
to
I
had
Teach was pub-
of passion in myself.
of course, can
mean
intense love or intense suffer^
go hand
hand
in
>lh£-^:^wo
in
language as well as
xii
Foreword to the Tenth Anniversary Edition
life.
— The Future Today,
a
decade
The Courage
after
to
ten years’
worth
ing place”
— how accurate was my
of events
Is
Here
Teach was published
— now
that
have “gone through the formality of takcrystal hall regarding the future
of education, the needs of teachers, and the service
I
hoped
this
hook
might render?
My
instinct that education
externals, shrinking the space
would become more obsessed with
needed
teachers and students, was, I’m sad to say,
one hardly need consult the Oracle tion.
The
No
of
e xcesses
at
support the inner
to
all
Of course,
too accurate.
Delphi to
Child Left Behind
make
lives of
such a predic-
(NCLB)
—
a set
of
unfunded, even unfounded federal mandates that have done much to
undermine teacher morale and
"are the ine vitable
and
outcomes of a min d-set that cares abo ut weigh ts
who
those
say that
we need weights and measures
to enforce accountability in education,
we
my
response
is,
yes,
do, but only under three conditions that are not being
We need iri
and learnin g
m ore than meaning.
me asures To
teachi ng
stifle real
to
make
sur e
(1)
that
we measure
the context of authentic eclucation,
tf
where
^gs
in
order
of course
met
today.
worth measuring
rote learning counts for
we know how to m»^n)ur
can open up, or shut down, the capacity for connectedness on which
good teaching depends.
The mode
of
knowing
that
dominates education creates
dis-
connections between teachers, their subjects, and tbeir students because as
it is
rooted in
fear.
something we can achieve only by disconnecting ourselves, physi-
cally
and emotionally, from the thing we want Why.^ Because
our subjective of
This mode, called objectivism, portrays truth
it.
No
if
we
lives will
matter what
get too close to
“it”
is
—an episode
— objectivism claims
we
that
tort
a Pandora’s
box of opinion,
our knowledge once the
relying exclusively on reason
swayed by subjective desire
mind and
the senses in this
in history, a
and
—and
a thing ceases to be
self
it is
it
is
the
enemy most
and ignorance that
open.
We
facts, logic
lest
it
is
keep the
a
will dis-
lid
shut by
and data that cannot be
The
role of the
our knowledge of it be tainted. is
feared not only because
creates relationships
work
to be
not to connect us to the world
an object and becomes
lives
the things of the
it
conta-
between those
relationships are contaminating as well.
— whether ecosystem — might our
know
(or so the theory goes).
In objectivism, subjectivity
minates things but because
creature from
phenomenon of human
can
bias,
lid Hies
scheme
but to hold the world at bay,
things and us
impure contents of
afar.
For objectivism, the subjective
—
know.
contaminate that thing and our knowledge
world truly and well only from
feared
the
it,
the wild, a passage in great literature, or a
behavior
to
When
a vital, interactive part
of
an indigenous people, or an
of art,
get a grip on us, biasing us toward
it,
thus
threatening the purity of our knowledge once again.
So objectivism, driven by
fear,
keeps us from forging rela-
tionships with the things of the world.
Its
modus operand!
is
sim-
when we distance ourselves from something, it becomes an object; when it becomes an object, it no longer has life; when it is ple:
lifeless,
it
cannot touch or transform
us, so
thing remains pure.
52
The Courage to Teach
our knowledge of the
For objectivism, any way ot knowing that
rec]uires subjective
involvement between the knower and the known primitive, unreliable,
and even dangerous. The
as irrational, true feeling is
regarded as
intuitive
derided
is
dismissed as sentimental, the imagination
is
seen as chaotic and unruly, and storytelling
and
is
is
labeled as personal
pointless.
That
is
why
music,
art,
and dance are
at the
bottom of the aca-
*
demic pecking order and the “hard” sciences are
why
at the top.
That
is
every “soft” discipline in the curriculum has practitioners doing
who who an-
research that ismiore objectivist than thou: literary scholars
count adverbs rather than explore meanings, psychologists alyze the data of
human
behavior as
if
people had no
more inner
life
than Styrofoam. Years ago, Alfred North Whitehead declared that “inert ideas”
were the bane of higher education, deadening the process
of teach-
ing and learning for students and teachers alike.^ But for objectivism, the only
good idea
butterfly,
an inert idea
is
that, like the lepidopterist’s prize
no longer elusive and on the wing but has been chloro-
is
formed, pinned, boxed, and labeled. This way of knowing der the world to
pay for what they I
us
lifeless
—but
call
that, say
its
proponents,
evils
ren-
a small price
objective truth.
have not forgotten that objectivism originated,
from the
is
may
of reckless subjectivity.
The
in part, to save
victims of the Black
Death would have benefited from the objective knowledge
that their
suffering was caused by Heas from infected rats, not by offenses against God.
someone
The
called
countless
women burned
at the
them witches bear mute testimony
stake because to the cruelties
that subjectivity can breed.
Objectivism
set
out to put truth on firmer ground than the
we can be grateful. But history is full of ironies, and one of them is the way objectivism has bred new versions of the same evils it tried to correct. Two examples come quickly to mind: the rise of modern dictatorships and the character whims of princes and
and
priests,
for that
of contemporary warfare.
A
good case can he made
free people
from the clutches
that objectivism,
of arbitrary
spired with other forces to deliver
Culture of Fear
to
power, has sometimes con-
modern people
53
A
which intended
into the clutches
of totalitarianism.
swers to
questions were possible
all
were glad
As people became convinced answers
to give those
knowledge and turn
—and
as specialists
— people began agenda
of social vulnerability, proclaiming,
to seize
the stage
power
know
alone
“I
emerged who
to distrust their
Thus
to authorities for truth.
for “authorities” with a political
that objective an-
own
was
set
moments
at
the truth that will
save you! Pall in and follow me.”
The
cruelties of
run amok,
jectivity
consequence
a
but
safe.
gone mad. Many Americans found
acceptable, even popular, because
We
were applauded
we
killed tens of
was fought with
it
thousands of Iraqis
we saw were shadowy images
all
in
TV
at distances that in the
of destruction
rooms throughout the land,
for the capacity to kill at great
the
up
close, subjectively, a
American people than
came
war considerably
the objectivist
Vietnam, our soldiers came face
to face
that
so grateful are
we were
war
forced
popular with
in the Persian Gulf. In
with the enemy, our civilians
into a national slough of guilt
Bush declared
— images
less
Americans, and
face to face with the deaths of fifty thousand
we sank
Gulf War,
remove.
Contrast this with the war in Vietnam, which to fight
of ob-
of the witch-hunt were the
technology that allows us to do violence to others
keep us
outcome
are another
just as the cruelties
of subjectivity
War
the Gulf
modern warfare
and
grief.
When
that our victory in the Persian Gulf
President
had
finally
allowed us to “kick the Vietnam syndrome,” he was celebrating the
triumph
of objective
Why lence?
the
does objectivism conspire with totalitarianism and vio-
From
for truth:
detachment over subjective intimacy.
it
the outset, the objectivist impulse
was
a quest
a fear-driven overkill of the subjectivity that
made
premodern world dangerous. Objectivism was never content
quarantine subjectivity the
was more than
germ of “self’
in
order to stop
its
to secure objective truth
senters to secure the “public order,”
spread.
—
It
aimed
to
at killing
just as dictators kill dis-
and warriors
kill
the
enemy
to
secure the “peace.”
“Killing the self”
found
when
at the heart
is
not an image of
my
of the objectivist literature
objectivism was in
full
invention. itself.
A
It
can be
century ago,
Bower, the philosopher Karl Pearson
54
The Courage to Teach
,
wrote an influential book called The Grammar of Science
made
a classic case for objective
forming
of
judgment upon
a
.
.
.
which he
knowledge, arguing that “the habit facts
unbiased by personal feeling
what may he termed the
characteristic of
in
frame
scientific
is
of mind.”^
Unfortunately, Pearson accompanied his classic case with a classic
Freudian
slip:
“The
at self-elimination
diction, but
I
call
-in it
when
prophecy:
a
man
has above
its
in the
all
Some may
his judgments.””
objectivism has pursued erable success
scientific
things to strive
call
ambiguous
it
century since Pearson wrote,
goal of eliminating the self with consid-
student must ask
he can use “I”
if
in
an auto-
biography.
My case against objectivism jectivism, fearful of both the
has been normative to this point: ob-
knowing
self
from world and deforms our
tances self
and the thing known,
relationships with our subjects,
our students, and ourselves. But an even more against this
knowing
mode of knowing:
it
fails to
telling case
we
made
actually happens, even at the heart of science it
how
itself.
at
arm’s length:
managed to build the objectivist wall between the knower known, we could know nothing except the wall itseji. Srirnr^^
ever
and the
requires an
engagement with the world,
knower and it
can be
give a faithful account of
No scientist knows the world merely by holding if
dis-
the
a live en coun ter
known. That encounter has moments
would not be an encounter without moments
between the
of distance, but
of intimacy as well.
Knowing of any sort is relational, animated by a desire to come into deeper community with what we know. Why does a historian study the “dead” past.^ To reveal how much of it lives in us today. Why does a biologist study the “mute” world of nature.^ To allow us to hear its voice speaking of how entwined we are in life’s ecology. Why does a literary scholar study the world of “Action”.^ To show us that the facts can never be understood except in communion with the imagination.
Knowing
is
how we make community
other, with realities that
sue of knowledge. in the process, to
alter us.
At
its
would elude
Knowing
is
a
with the unavailable
us without the connective
human way
to seek relationship and,
have encounters and exchanges that
deepest reaches,
knowing
is
55
A
Culture of Fear
tis-
will inevitably
alw ays communal.
1 he now-faniou^ story of biologist Barbara McClintock
mines the
know
fact that vve
disconnecting from
became fascinated transposition.
modern
who
died in 1992 at age ninety,
early in her career with the mysteries of genetic
Though
her research was often dismissed as wildly
unorthodox, she pursued of
by connecting with the world, not by
McClintock,
it.
illu-
genetics,
it
into discoveries that
and she was honored
changed the map
1983 with a Nobel
in
Prize.
McClintock did not objectify her
approach
subject, did not
with the textbook notion that her task was to analyze Instead, she approached genetic material
hits. it
could best be understood as
writer has said, McClintock
a
it
it
into data
on the assumption
that
communal phenomenon. As one
“made
a crucial discovery
by recogniz-
more complex and interdependent than anyone had believed. By observing how genes function in their environment rather than regarding them merely as isolated entities, she discovered that bits of genes can move about ing that the genetics of living organisms
is
on chromosomes.”^
When
Evelyn Fox Keller interviewed McClintock
write her biography,
it
became
order to
communal premise of relationship among genes:
clear that the
McClintock’s work went well beyond the it
in
included the relationship between the genes and the scientist
who
studied them. Keller ther
wanted
and deeper
to
know, “What enabled McClintock
into the mysteries of genetics than her colleagues.^”
McClintock’s answer, Keller she
tells
us one
tells us, is
must have the time
simple:
“Over and over again
to look, the patience to ‘hear
the material has to say to you,’ the openness to
Above
all,
Of
to see fur-
one must have
‘a
come
to you.’
feeling for the organism.’
course, McClintock’s science
analytical thinking
‘let it
what
was distinguished by
and impeccable data; one does not win
a
precise
Nobel
Prize without them. But data and logic and the distance they provide are only one pole of the paradox of great science.
arguably the greatest biologist of our century,
is
When asked
McClintock, to
name
the
heart of her knowing, she invariably uses the language of relationship, of connectedness, of
community. As one commentator puts
56
The Courage to Teach
it.
McClintock “gained valuable knowledge by empathizing with her corn plants, submerging herself
boundary between object and
world and dissolving the
observer.’’"
sums up McClintock’s genius, and
Keller
knowing,
in their
in a single,
luminous sentence: McClintock,
in
her relation
form of love, love that allows
to ears of corn, achieved “the highest
for intimacy
the genius of all great
without the annihilation of difference.”'^
These remarkable words describe not only the heart
of
Barbara
McClintock’s science hut also the heart of every authentic relationship that a
human
being might have
other people, with things of the ing and of living that has }for,
even
a
need
for, its
— with
spirit.
history,
They
moved beyond
with nature, with
describe a
way
of
know-
fear of the other into respect
otherness.
The real agenda driving objectivism is not to tell the truth about knowing but to shore up our self-aggrandizing myth that knowledge is power and that with it we can run the world People ofte n
an effor t to deny their fear s
lie in
b oth our knowledge and o ur power t ressinp^
evidence before our
own
—an d
in
eyes:
objectivism
abou t
lies
hopes of avoiding the dis-
we
are ruining, not running,
die3iiOi4d.
Modern knowledge not to control
more fail.
its
clear each
has allowed us to manipulate the
but
fact that
becomes
human
systems
fate (to say
nothing of our own), a
day
ecosystem dies and our
as the
wo rld
Indeed, by disconnecting us from the world, objectivism has led
us into actions so inharmonious with reality that catastrophe seems
we stay the course. Objectivism, far from telling the about how we know, is a myth meant to feed our fading fan-
inevitable if truth
tasy of science, technology,
power, and control.
we dare to move through our fear, to practice knowing as form of love, we might abandon our illusion of control and enter a If
a
partnership with the otherness of the world. By finding our place in the ecosystem of reality, life-giving fully in in
we might
and which are not
our
own
destinies,
see
—and
more
clearly
which actions are
in the process participate
and the destiny
of the world, than
— —
our drive for control. This relational way of knowing
love takes
away
fear
and co-creation replaces control
57
A
Culture of Fear
is
in
a
more
we do which
way
of
— knowing
on
that can hel}\us reclaim the capacity for connectedness
which goocLteaching depends.
Not Afraid
Be Fear
is
everywhe re
—
and
dents, in ourselves
and invaded by reality for the
fear,
Fear
how
can
so fundamental to the
is
spiritual traditions originate in
our
lives.
.
we transcend
in that direction
With
it
human
and reconnect with
The
the one
is
only path
marked
all
condition that
they propose to take us beyond fear,
can escape
and enter
fear’s paralysis
all
its
know
the great
effects
on
proclaim the same core mes-
“Be not afraid.” Though the traditions vary widely
sage:
I
“spiritual.”
an effort to overcome
different words, they
our stu-
in
from everything Surrounded
cuts us off
it
our institutions,
in
sake of teaching and learning?
might take us
that
our culture,
in
in the
ways
hold out the same hope:
all
we
where encoun-
a state of grace
ters
with otherness will not threaten us but will enrich our work and
our
lives. It is
important to note with care what that core teaching does
and does not fears
—and
“ say.
if
it
Be not afraid ” does not say
did,
perfection. Instead,
we
could dismiss
we do
says that
it
it
as
that
we
should not have
an impossible counsel of
not need to be our fear s, quite a
different proposition.
As
my that in
young
a
teacher,
craft so well, be so
yearned for the day when
my
would know
competent, so experienced, and so powerful,
late fifties,
but
I
I
know
need not be
that
my
Each time
I
walk into
myself from which place within
my
my
day
fears
inner landscape from which
I
will
—
never come.
can speak and
a classroom,
I
I
can have
a fearful place:
stand sorneplace else in
but
my
I
always have
I
my
act.
teaching will come, just as
fear,
will
can choose the place within
my
I
can choose the
teaching will be aimed.
I
can teach from curiosity or
hope or empathy or honesty, places that are fears.
I
for there are other places in
students toward which
need not teach from
my
I
could walk into any classroom without feeling afraid. But now,
I
fears,
I
as real within
need not be fear
inner landscape.
58
The Courage to Teach
—
if
I
am
me
as are
willing to
We yearn
ter description ot that
know of no betpoem quoted at the
and
tor a ditterent place to stand,
yearning than the Rilke
I
head ot the Introduction:
Ah, not
to he cut oft,
not through the slightest partition shut out from the law of the
— What
stars.
/
The if
inner
is it?
not intensified sky,
hurled through with birds and deep
with the winds of homecoming.'^
“Pur off”
njstom ary
IQ
of being. B ut there
state
the consta nt y earning for connectedness a yearning ,
within us
—“Ah!”— is
to live
withoutTR-e slightest partition between our souls and the distant
between ourselves and the world’s otherness. with the other because
nity at
home
in
our
lives,
we know
We yearn
that with
no longer strangers
to
commu-
for
we would
it
stars,
feel
more
one another and aliens
to
the earth.
But the “homecoming” of which Rilke speaks has two qualities
make
that
First,
own
it is
it
quite different from our conventional image of home.
inner, not outer.
— but by
the
are in or
not a place that
is
same token, we cannot be banned from
cannot be stolen from
we
This home
us.
how many
No matter
we can
it,
and
it
where we are or what condition
obstacles are before us,
we can always come
home through a simple inward turning. Second, when we make that inward turn, the home we find is not a closed and parochial place in which we can hide, from which we can neither see nor be seen. Instead, this home is as open and vast as the sky itself. Here we are at home with more than our own familiar thoughts and those people who think like us. We are at home back
in a
universe that embraces both the smallness of “I” and the vastness
and does so with consummate
ease. In this
home,
of all that
is
we know
ourselves not as isolated atoms threatened by otherness hut
“not
I,”
as integral parts of the great
web of life.
In that
knowing, we are
taken beyond fear toward wholeness. In response to the question
“How
the fear"that destmys coni^tedness?”
I
am
59
A
Culture of Fear
can
we move
saying,
hevon^^l
“By reclaiming
the connectednes s th at takes a wav — fear.” •
my
case
— hut
N
that
is
pre cisely h ow the spiritual
no beginning or end, where,
where we
started
question
is
/And know the whether we choose
mov
life
^*^,
as Eliot writes,
place for the
first
iq rirrlp*;
we
time.”'^
“arrive
Th e onl y
to stand outsid e of the circle or
it .
H ow fears that
do we get
into that circle?
keep us disconnected, what
hands with others? The truth
human
In the
around
and
'"7
^
^
that have
wi thin
realiz e the circularity of ^
I
_
brings,
is
Our
will
move
that the circle
is
are gripped by the us toward joining
already in us.
is
psyche, apparent opposites chase each other
in circles all the time: love
desire.
When we
and
hate, laughter
intense fear of connectedness,
and
tears, fear
and the challenges
it
pursued by an equally intense desire for connectedness, and
the comforts
it
For
offers.
the fearful efforts
all
ourselves by disconnecting, the
human
n ection "Ah, not to be cut off.
to protect
soul yearns eternally for con-
We can get
.
:
we make
into the circle that
is
already within us by abandoning ourselves to the yearnings that run just
behind, or ahead
Sometimes enced
K— 12
and deep of even the
fears. is
a
simple step. In a group of experi-
worked with
six feet six
voice.
man
I
our
takes
all it
teachers
shop teacher,
of,
No
inches
tall,
for
two years was
a high school
weighing 240 pounds,
one ever thought of
this
man
athletic
as afraid, not
himself.
For several years, the principal tbe teacher to attend a
summer
at his school
institute
had been pressing
on technology. The shop
curriculum, said the principal, had to be modernized, and quickly, or the students
would be
Nonsense, at that institute
lost in the past.
this fearless teacher replied.
is
probably
just a fad.
dents need to learn the basics
There
tools.
will be plenty of
Even
if
The it
technology touted
isn’t,
high school stu-
— hands-on work with time
later
on
materials and
for fancy refinements
of
their technique.
The shop
teacher and his principal became locked in a de-
moralizing cycle of demands and refusals, each exacerbating the other.
Their relations grew adversarial and strained. As the shop
teacher participated in our group, that brokenness weighed heavy
on
his heart.
60
The Courage to Teach
— Then one day that the cycle
make its
his
the shop teacher
came
to a
meeting and
had been broken. His principal had called him
demands once more. This
and
said, “I
know why.
I’m afraid
me
has passed
still
did,
afraid I
a silence,
too,” he said. “Let’s
They
—
by, iifraid
There was
go
want
don’t
am
a
to
go
has-been as
now my held
it,
afraid
I
a teacher.”
and then the principal spoke: “I’m
afraid,
to the institute together.”
and they reclaimed and deepened
and the shop teacher
at his prin-
to that institute, hut
won’t understand
I
in to
time, instead of arguing the mer-
of the traditional shop curriculum, the teacher looked
cipal
told us
feels
he
is
their friendship,
making progress toward moderniz-
ing the curriculum and revitalizing his vocation.
This teacher’s breakthrough did not directly involve adopting a
new
technique for teaching; indeed,
anything
at all.
it
did not directly involve
His breakthrough was into a new way of being, into
the realization that he could have fear but did not need to be fear that he could speak ful rather
act
from
than from the fear
The shop just
and
a place of honesty
about being fear-
itself.
teacher honored a yearning within himself that was
behind, or ahead
of, his fear,
his principal, his students, his
Sometimes the way beyond
the yearning not to be cut off
world of work, or
fear
is
A
his teacher’s heart.
just that simple.
61
Culture of Fear
from
N
f (
Chapter
III
The Hidden Wholeness Paradox
Teaching and Learning
in
There
is
in all visible things
an invisible fecundity, a a a
dimmed
meek
light,
namelessness,
hidden wholeness.
This mysterious Unity and Integrity is
Wisdom,
the
Mother
of
all,
Natura naturans.
— Thomas Merton, “Hagia Sophia”' Thinking the World Together The
culture of disconnection that undermines teaching and
learning
ern
is
driven partly by
commitment
fear.
But
it is
also driven by
to thinking in polarities, a
63
our West-
thought form that
thinking
is
when we
so
try
cmbccickd
—and my own words
In earlier chapters,
way we approach nique,
I
we
our culture that
in
rarely escape
To
teaching.
imbalances
obsession with objective knowledge,
and I
integrity.
To
correct our
stressed subjective engage-
ment. To correct our excessive regard tor the powers of
ture,
power of emotions
My
intent
it is
hard
was
to
do
to freeze, or free, the
But
to rebalance the scales.
that without
slamming
in a
intellect,
mind. polarizing cul-
I
may
be mistaken for
someone who excuses poor technique, urging teachers
who
who doesn’t
it is”;
care about the content ot your
thoughts, just as long as you “share what you
said.
obvious
just to “be
believes there are no standards for truth, just
“whatever you think
It is
I
the scales in the opposite
direction. In arguing tor the neglected pole,
themselves”;
in the
correct our overemphasis on tech-
stressed the teacher’s identity
stressed the
even
prove the point.
will
tried to correct several
1
it,
(I
feel.”
hope!) that these are distortions of what
But we distort things
way
this
the time because
all
have
I
we
are
trained neither to voice both sides of an issue nor to listen with both ears.
The problem
versation fiiir
some
goes deeper than the had habit of competitive con-
of us have:
me
tell
your
or foul, to argue the other side!
thesis
It is
and
[ess series of
any way,
We see ev frA'rhinp-
or that, plus or minus, on or off, black or white;
an
will find
we
rooted in the fact that
look at the world through analytical lenses.
ality into
I
rhi individual and
‘little*’ sitnrrpz
of the disciplifies and tradiuon. A learning space should not be hlled with abstractions so bloated that no room remains for
the “big” stories
the small but soulful realities that
space there must be ample
of personal experience
stories at
room
grow
our students’
in
for the little stories of individuals,
which the
in
lives. In this
student’s inner teacher
is
work. But when
we
my
little story,
or yours,
our only point of reference,
is
become lost in narcissism. So th e big stories of the disci must also be told in the learning spa ce stori es that are uni-
easily
plines
—
versal in scope a nd
and archetypal
depth, that frame ou r perso nal tales
in
learn to listen to the big stories with the
when
dividuals
5.
they
tell
same
us the tales of their
must help students
respect
we
accord in-
lives.
The space should support solitude and surrou nd it with
the rcr
demands solitude— not only
in the
sou rces of community. Learning sense that
st udents
r^d
time alone to
refiect
the deeper sense that t he integrity of the
respecte^not violated, also
We
help us understand what they mean.
we
if
—
demands community-
and absorb but
tTip«"t-ii-ir^n
static
advances our knowledge
of truth
sometimes raucous but always communal,
which
and
and dynamic.
through conHict, not competition. Competition
sum game
obser-
complementing each
vations and interpretations, correcting and other, torn by conflict in this
—sharing
as th e
itsel f,
as
that kee ps testing old con-
.
the current conclusions in order to get in on
it is
not our knowledge of conclusions that keeps
106
The Courage to Teach
— US in the truth.
our commitment
It is
to the conversation itself,
our
willingness to put forward our observations and interpretations for
community and
testing by the
we must know how to observe and
the truth, ten,
to return the favor to others.
with passion and with discipline,
reflect
in the circle
To
he in
and speak and
lis-
gathered around a
given subject. truth
If
an eternal conversation whose conclusions and norms
is
keep changing, what happens
do not think
that
of objectivity
—
As
far as
I
knowledge
the
subject
my
I
anything about the nature
of truth alters
except the objectivist myth.
can
tell,
of procedural rules.
I
knowledge we
the only “objective”
comes from
that
and debating
what we regard
image
knowledge.^
to the idea of objective
a
community
as objective
is
of people looking at a
framework
their observations within a consensual
know of no field, from
possess
science to religion,
where
knowledge did not emerge from long and
complex communal discourse
no
that continues to this day,
field
where
the facts of the matter were delivered fully formed from on high.
The of truth
firmest foundation of all our
is
the
community
This community can never offer us ultimate certainty
itself.
not because
knowledge
its
process
is
flawed but because certainty
is
beyond the
grasp of finite hearts and minds. Yet this community can do rescue us from ignorance, bias, and self-deception to
if
we
—
to
its
to
are willing
submit our assumptions, our observations, our theories
ourselves
much
— indeed,
scrutiny.
In rejecting the objectivist model, tivism that reduces truth to whatever the
have not embraced a
I
community
rela-
decides, for the
community of truth includes a transcendent dimension of truthknowing and truth-telling that takes us beyond relativism and absolutism alike. Tbe clearest and most compelling naming of that dimension
is
found
in a couplet
and suppose, /But the Secret
a ring
“We
dance round
the middle
and knows.
by Robert PYost: sits in
in
Frost honors the transcendent secret of the subject at the center
of the community of truth, a secret that
solutism,
and by
which claims
relativism,
we know. The and
it
that
we can know
which claims
subject
is
knows
the
full reality of things,
that things have
itself
its
107 in
Community
no
reality save
what
we can ever know own secrets.
better than
forever evades our grasp by keeping
Knowing
equally obscured by ab-
it,
— this
If
were not the
come
long ago
case, the process of
Why
to a haft.
did
we
knowing would have
not settle for the pre-Socratic
view of the nature of the physical world or the medieval view or the view of early
modern
science?
Why
on the view we hold today? Because a subject that continually calls us
are
we
at the center of
deeper into
its
refuses to be reduced to our conclusions about
the the
pressing, even
now,
our attention
is
secret, a subject that
it.
The idea of a subject that calls to us is more than metaphor. In community of truth, the knower is not the only active agent subject itself participates in the dialectic of knowing. It is as Mary
Oliver says: like the
“The world
your imagination,
offers itself to
wild geese ...,/... announcing your place
/calls to
you
the family of
/ in
things.”'^
We say that knowing begins in our intrigue about some subject, but that intrigue are people
who
is
the result of the subject’s action
The
things of the world
call to us,
each of us to different things, as each
Once we have heard
that call
us out of ourselves and into
knowing
own
hear the music of
and we are drawn
drawn
hear the
to
them
to different friends.
and responded, the subject selfhood.
calls
At the deepest reaches,
requires us to imagine the inner standpoint of the subject
of that historical
moment,
or of that ear of corn. to really
its
is
who
us: geologists
who
hear rocks speak, historians are people
voices of the long dead, writers are people
words.
upon
of that literary character, of that rock,
As one research
scientist has said, “If
understand about a tumor, you’ve got
you want
to be a tumor.’’’^
We cannot know the subject well if we stand only in our own shoes. We must believe in the subject’s inner life and enter with empathy into in
it,
nor cultivate an inner
age the knower’s inner capacity to intuit,
The to
when we neither believe our own. When we deny or disparis the objectivist habit, we have no
an empathy unavailable
let
life
of
life,
as
to us
alone inhabit, the inwardness of the known.
sort of science
done by Barbara McClintock requires one
fathom the mystery of self in order
world, to become
who
—
to
as a colleague said
understands where the mysteries
fathom the mystery of the
of McClintock
lie’’
rather “than
mystifies.’’’^
108
The Courage to Teach
— “someone
someone who
As we gather around not only
we who
community
the subject in the
rects us, resisting
our
The
identity, refusing to be
subject
cor-
itself
framings with the strength of
false
it is
knowing, rejecting
correct each other’s attempts at
blurry observations and false interpretations.
of truth,
its
own
reduced to our self-certain ways of naming
its
otherness.
Eventually, as our insight deepens, the subject yields to a cer-
naming, and we conclude that we know
tain
But the transcendent
it.
subject always stands ready to take us by surprise, calling us into
namings and
observations, interpretations, and
new
into the mystery that
can never be fully named.
Openness nity
to
transcendence
is
what distinguishes the commu-
of truth from both absolutism and relativism. In
the process of truth-knowing and truth-telling
nor anarchic. Instead,
and
distance, of speaking
ing, that
the
it is
makes
is
this
community,
neither dictatorial
complex and eternal dance of intimacy
a
and
collaborators
listening, of
knowing and not know-
and co-conspirators
of the
knowers and
known.
The Grace of Great Things The community of truth mission because to,
the reality
we
it
is
an image that can carry the educational
embraces an
essential fact: the reality
long to know, extends far beyond
teracting with one another. In the
community
of
we belong
human beings intruth, we interact
nonhuman forms of being that are as important and powerful the human and sometimes even more so. This is a community held
with as
together not only by our personal powers of thought and feeling but also by the
power of “the grace
of great things.”''
That phrase comes from an
essay by Rilke.
When
alized that our conventional images of educational
our relationships with the great things that things that
call
the educational
us to
know,
to teach, to learn.
community becomes when
great things and relies entirely on our
own
in
I
it
read
it, I
Community
re-
community ignore us together
— the
saw how diminished excludes the grace of
c]uite limited graces.
109
Knowing
call
I
\\y
great things,
I
mean
seekers has always gathered jects,
not
th'e texts
the subjects around
—
which the
circle ot
not the disciplines that study these sub-
that talk about them, not the theories that explain
them, but the things themselves.
mean
I
the genes and ecosystems of biology, the symbols and
referents of philosophy
and theology, the archetypes
of betrayal
forgiveness and loving and loss that are the stuff of literature. the artifacts
and lineages of anthropology, the materials
I
and
mean
of engineer-
ing with their limits and potentials, the logic of systems in manage-
ment, the shapes and colors of music and
art, the novelties
and
patterns of history, the elusive idea of justice under law.
Great things such education.
It is
humans must have gathered around that we become who we are as knowers, teachers, and learnWhen we are at our best, it is because the grace of great things
derstand them fire
ers.
in
gathering around them and trying to un-
in the act of
—
nexus of community
as these are the vital
—
as the first
has evoked from us the virtues that give educational finest
community
its
form:
•
We
our communit y not because
invite diversity into
litically
correct but because diverse viewpoints are
it is
po-
demanded
by the manifold mysteries of great things. •
We embrace ambiguity cisive
but because
cepts to •
We
not because
we understand
embrace the vastness
welcome
the inadequacy of our con-
of great things.
is
we
are angry or
required to correct our biases
and prejudices about the nature
We
are confused or inde-
creative confiii't not because
hostile but because confiict
•
we
of great things.
we owe it to one anabout what we have seen would be
practice hones ty not only because
other but because to
lie
to betray the truth of great things. •
We experience humility but because humility
is
not because
we have fought and
the only lens through
lost
which great
—and once we have seen them, humility
things can be seenis
the only posture possible.
110
The Courage to Teach
men nnd wome-n rho)ii£rh cclucat ixui not beWe_become cause we have privileged information but because tyranny in any form can be overcome only by invoking the grace of
•
great things.
Of course, can easily
the educational
cite instances
when
community
the
is
not always at
community
of truth has
by the antithesis of virtues such as these. The Double Helix chronicles such a case: the discovery of
its
best!
We
been driven
is
a
hook
that
DNA by James Watson and
Francis Crick, a case in which ego and competition, pigheadedness
and greed, are shown
So
it
intrigues
viewed on the
way
to lie at the heart of the
me
that the
two principals them
the great thing called
James Watson
DNA,
“The molecule
on Francis and me. I
which has been
Then
spoke about the
since they first encountered
DNA.
said,
trying to prove that
enterprise.'^
in that story, inter-
fortieth anniversary of their discovery,
certain virtues have overtaken
reflected
academic
I
is
guess the rest of my
was almost equal a
so beautiful.
to
life
Its
glory was
has been spent
being associated with
hard task.”
Francis Crick
—
never seen him in a modest
of
whom Watson
mood”
—
replied,
once
said, “I
“We were
have
upstaged by
a molecule.”'*^
Crick’s humility
of
be uncharacteristic and strained, hut that
more compelling example of the power of the comtruth a community in which even our own agendas are
only makes
munity
may
it
a
—
sometimes upstaged by the grace of great things.
When
the great
when they lose their gravitational pull on our lives, out of the communal orbit into the black hole of posturing,
things disappear,
we
fall
narcissism,
and arrogance.
H ow do the great things disappear?
They dim, if they do not community that forms (or
when the image of deforms) education has more to do with disappear altogether,
intimacy, majority rule,
or marketing than with knowing, teaching, and learning. But there is
a
deeper threat to great things: they are killed off by an intellectual
arrogance that
tries to
reduce them to nothing more than the machi-
nations of our minds.
Ill
Knowing
in
Community
The
rhin^rs
disappear
With absolutism, we claim
relativism.
ot great things, so there
—
them
is
or with each other.
remains
is
in the
them
for
no need
The
rtf >>r>fl-| :ih«;o1ii|-i^pp
to
know
precisely the nature
continue
to
nnrL
dialogue with
in
experts possess the facts, and
to transmit those facts to those
who do
all
that
not know.
we claim that knowledge depends wholly on where one stands, so we cannot know anything with any certainty beyond our personal point of view. Once again, there is no need to continue With
in
relativism,
dialogue with great things or with each other: one truth for you,
another for me, and never mind the difference.
Of
course, the great things
only disappear from our view. all
the assaults of
ments
human
of life itself
we abandon
and
reality
We tTiat
a life
great things themselves survive
of the life of the
mind. The question
world
at will.^
Will
know
is,
of t heir
own
the indelives.^
power of great things o nly when
—an inwardness,
will
the world per-
we acknowledge
identity,
and
we
integrity
than objects, a quality of being and agency that
on us and our thoughts about them
relv
— they
of great things and their power to work on our
make them more
doe s not
in reality
arrogance, for they are the irreducible ele-
will experience the
them
grant
The
the arrogance that claims either to
fectly or to invent the
pendent
do not disappear
.
To understand this more fully, we need only look at what happens when we rob great things of their integrity. In the study of liter-
now common to teach classic texts through analytical lenses that show how riddled they are with the biases of their authors and \ their times. From this standpoint, it does not matter that Moby Dic}{ reaches deep into such great things in the human experience as hubris .^d destiny. It matters only that Melville was a patriarchal bigot. ature,
it is
David Denby has shown the hubris of this posture us, teachers
and students
itself: it
alike, feelings of superiority to the text,
thereby depriving us of the chance to learn anything from
how
superior
with a text or
we a
are.'“ It is
It is
it
except
impossible to be in a learning relationship
person that one regards as morally bankrupt.
reduce great things to such dismissive c ategories, their selfhood
gives
and deprive them of their voi^
not cheap mysticism to claim that
inner lives that will speak to our
own
—
if
we
112
The Courage to Teach
we
When
rob them of
.
all
let
great things have
them. Literary
texts
are merely the clearest
example
of such voices, voices that reach us
with astonishing clarity across huge gaps of space and time. tory of the to
it,
will
A
Third Reich.speaks
hnd echoes
a voice of evil that
my own
in
listen carefully
I
in the lifetime
of its
that even the rocks speak, telling tales across gaps of time far
we would not know we could hear.
than recorded histot^, stories
were the only speech
Annie Dillard
titled
The I
inner
life
of
any great thing
develop and deepen an inner
other being what
The
I
of
life
teaching ourselves to
wider vocal-
to TaH^, listen.^'
me until know in an-
incomprehensible to
my own.
cannot
I
in myself.
conclusion seems clear:
we know
is
will be
do not know
of the universe until
human
if
one of her books Teaching a Stone
hut the real issue, as Dillard knows,
in-
Every geologist knows
species.
its
and, through careful
a seashell
much about what happened
habitant and in the evolution of
ization
his-
soul.
marine biologist can pick up
listening, learn
if
The
we cannot know
the great things
ourselves to be great things. Abso-
lutism and relativism have ravaged not only the things of the world
but our sense of the
knowing
self as well.
We
are whiplashed be-
tween an arrogant overestimation of ourselves and estimation of ourselves, but the outcome distortion of the
humble
is
a servile
under-
always the same:
yet exalted reality of the
human
self,
a
a para-
doxical pearl of great price. I
ets.
once heard
this
Hasidic
In one pocket there
We need a coat with
is
dust,
tale:
“We
and
in the
two pockets
to
need
a coat
with two pock-
other pocket there
remind us who we
ing, teaching,
and learning under the grace
from teachers
who cjwn
such a coat and
are.”^^
is
Know-
of great things will
who wear
it
gold.
come
to class every day.
Knowing and the Sacred The images
of knowing central to this chapter
—
the
community
of
truth, the grace of great things, the transcendent subject, the “Secret”
that “sits in the
middle and knows”
—
these images emerge, for me,
my experience of reality as sacred and of the sacred as real. Othmay arrive at similar understandings from different starting
from ers
points.
But
I
believe that
knowing, teaching, and learning are
113
Knowing
in
Community
grounded rj^]iiires
cultivating a sense of the sacre^
am
1
renewing
in sacred soil^and that
aware
well
my
vocatjoiLiLS a teacher
.
that the marriage ot
knowing and
the sacred
has not always produced admirable offspring. But the history of ed-
show that spirituality is no worse than secularism in its propensity to sow had seed. know of no religious pathology, from
ucation will
I
fear to bigotry to rigid orthodoxy, that
is
not also found in secular
groves of academe. Tl^e healt h
form, comfortably ensconced
in the
of^durntion
abi lity to hold sacred
depends on our
o^at they c What do mean
get her
and secular
^ correct anTenr cFre^
s
I
jTjith^ r.
i
hy sacred?
a paradoxical concept
It is
to -
—
would expect when exploring the most profound truth of all.
as
one
On one
hand, the word points to an ineffable immensity beyond concept and definition, the sacred as
Holy
—
the mysterium tremendum, the
of reality.^^ r especL ”
On
t
renew
my
cannot depend on
teaching. But
he great things of the
Many
critics
I
The Idea of the
in
at the heart
qiii rollins, 1962), pp. 77—78. Reprinted by permission of the Estate of William ^t^dTord. 2.
Albert Q-Amns, Notebooks, 1935—1942
3.
Ibid., pp. 13-14.
4.
Nelle Morton, The Journey
Is
Home
(New
York: Marlowe, 1996),
p. 13.
(Boston: Beacon Press, 1985),
pp. 55-56.
(New
5.
Erik H. Erikson, Identity and the Life Cycle
6.
Alfred North Whitehead, The Aims of Education
American Library/Mentor Books, 7.
8.
Ibid., p.
9.
Sue
10.
1.
12.
“The (iender Equation,”
1.
My
Valparaiso Univer-
Sciences, Sept. -Oct. 1992, p. 46.
A Feeling for the Organism: The Life and Wor\ of McClintocf (New York: Freeman, 1983), p. 198.
Rosser, “Ciender Equation,”
p. 46.
Evelyn Fox Keller, Reflections on Gender and Science
Mitchell, “Ah,
Not
to
CHAPTER
Fla.:
III:
(New Haven, Conn.
p. 164.
Be Cut Off,”
Gidding,”
1909-1950 (Orlando,
2.
1
Evelyn Fox Keller,
14. T. S. Eliot, “Little
1.
at
1937), p.
to this source.
Yale University Press, 1985), 13.
New
1
V. Rosser,
Barbara 1
1
me
York:
1961), p. 13.
thanks to Mark Schwehn, dean of Christ College for alerting
(New
Grammar of Science (London: Dent,
Karl Pearson, The
sity,
York: Norton, 1964).
in
T
p. 191.
S. Eliot:
The Complete Poems and Plays,
Harcourt Brace, 1958),
p. 145.
THE HIDDEN WHOLENESS
Thomas P. McDonnell (ed.), “Hagia Sophia,” in.4 Thomas Merton Readei (New York: Doubleday, 1989), p. 506. These words are attributed to Bohr in many secondary sources (for example, Avery Dulles, The Reshaping of Catholicism |San F'rancisco:
21
Notes
HarperSanFrancisco, 1989|,
them
p. 37),
though
in his writings, •ij'heir authenticity
Bohr, in wn essay called lather
was the
“My
Father”:
is
(New 3.
is
also a
and IVo/f
York: Wiley, 1967),
Dietrich Bonhoeffer,
p.
as Seen by
Hans
maxims of my profound
profound truth,
where opposites are obviously absurd.”
Niels Bohr: His Life
(ed.),
favorite
sorts ol truths,
truths recognized by the fact that the opposite contrast to trivialities
to find
substantiated by his son,
“One of the
between the two
distinction
have been unable
1
S.
in
Rozental
His Friends and Colleagues
328.
Together
{New
York: HarperCollins, 1954),
p. 78. 4.
Robert N. Bellah and others. Habits of the Heart (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1985).
5.
E. F.
Schumacher, Small
(New 6.
Rainer Maria Rilke, Letters
Mary
Oliver,
Monthly 2.
to a
Young
Poet, trans.
M. D. Herter (New
p. 35.
SiCoiiSl'AxweW, Measure of My Days,
CHAPTER 1.
Beautiful: Economics as If People Mattered
York: HarperCollins, 1973), pp. 97—98.
York: Norton, 1993), 7.
Is
IV:
p. 25.
KNOWING
“Wild Geese,”
in
Dream
COMMUNITY
IN
Worl{
(New
York: Atlantic
Press, 1986), p. 14.
Page Smith, “To Communicate Truth,” Whole Earth Review,
Summer
1987, p. 55. 3.
Benjamin Barber, “The Civic Mission cation
and the
of the University,” in
Practice of Democratic Politics, ed.
Higher Edu-
Bernard Murchland
(Dayton, Ohio: Kettering Foundation, 1991). 4.
Ian Barbour, Religion in an Age of Science (San Francisco: HarperSan-
Francisco, 1990),
p. 107.
5.
Ibid.
6.
Gary Zukav, The Dancing
Wu
Li Masters
(New
York: Morrow, 1979),
p. 94. 7.
Barbour, Religion
8.
Ibid., p. 220.
9.
Ibid., p. 221.
10.
in
an Age of Science,
p. 107.
Michael Polanyi, Personal Knowledge ((Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1960).
1
1.
Richard Gelw'ick, “Polanyi: Religion
and
An
Occasion of Thanks,” Cross Currents:
Intellectual Life, 1991, 41, 380-381. See also
218
Notes
Richard
Gclwick, The Way of Discovery: An Introduction Michael Polanyi
A
12. 13.
(New
to the
Thought of
York: Oxford University Press, 1977).
Feeling for the Organism,
Robert Frost, “The Secret
Sits,”
p.
200.
from The Poetry of Robert
Edward Connery Lathem (New York: Henry right 1942 by Robert Frost,
©
Frost, eel.
Holt, 1979),
p.
1970 by Lesley Frost FLdlantine,
Henry Holt & Co. Reprinted by permission of Henry Holt & 14.
Oliver, Dreezm Woif, p. 14.
15.
Keller,
16.
James Shapiro, University of Chicago, quoted
T
362.
Feeling for the Organism,
p.
©
O^py1969 by
Co., Inc.
207. in
McClintock, 90, G^ne Research Pioneer Dies,”
“Dr. Barbara
New
Yorf Times, Sept.
4,
1992,p.C16. 1
7.
Rainer Maria Rilke, Rodin and Other Prose Pieces (London: Quartet Books, 1986),
p. 4.
18.
James D. Watson, The Double Helix (New York: Atheneum,
19.
Leon
Jaroff,
“Happy
Birthday,
Double Helix,” Time, Mar.
1968).
15, 1993,
pp. 58-59. 20.
David Denby, Great Boofs (New York: Simon & Schuster,
21.
Annie
Dillard, Teaching a Stone to Talk^
(New
1996).
York: HarperCollins,
1982). 22.
A
23.
Rudolf Otto, The Idea of the Holy (London: Oxford University
24.
Hannah Arendt, Eichmann in Jerusalem: A (New York: Viking Penguin, 1964).
25.
Sharon Bertsch McGrayne, Nobel Prize Women
rabbi told
Carol, 1993) 26.
I
am
me
this
Hasidic
tale.
I
have not found
it
in print.
Press, 1952).
Report on the Banality of Evil
in Science
(New
York:
p. 170.
grateful to
Dawna Markova,
scholar and practitioner in the field of
bodily knowing, for information about the fight or Bight syndrome, “soft eyes,”
and the practice of aikido. For more on these
Bryner and
Dawna Markova, Aw Unused Intelligence
Conari Press, 27.
Andy
(Berkeley, Calif.:
1996).
Diane Ackerman, A Natural History of the Senses (New York: Vintage Books, 1991),
p. 309.
CHAPTER 1.
subjects, see
David
V.
Erdman
V:
(ed.),
TEACHING
IN
COMMUNITY
“Auguries of Innocence,”
Poetry and Prose of William Blafe
(New
p. 489.
219 Notes
in
The Complete
York: Doubleday Anchor, 1988),
2.
“Integrating C'omnuinity Service and Classroom Instruction Knhances
Learning: Results from an Lxperiment,” Educatiofial Evaluation and Policy Analysis, 1993, 3.
luclith
h, 410-419:
Axler Turner, “Mathematicians Debate ('alculus Reform and
Better Teaching,” Chronicle of Higher Education, )an. 31, 1990, 4.
“Does Objective Reality
Wide Web 5.
Universe a Phantasm.^” World
Exist, or Is the |
Erdman, Complete
Poetry and Prose of William Blaise,
VI:
LEARNING
p.
489.
COMMUNITY
IN
T H. White, The Once and Future King (New York: Ace Books, p. 183.
A 15.
Virtual Library: Sumeria http://wvvvv.livelinks.com/sumerial.
CHAPTER 1.
p.
1987),
Reprinted by permission of The Putnam Publishing Group.
©
Copyright
H. White; renewed
1939, 1940 by T.
©
1958 by T. H. White
Proprietor. 2.
Seven years after
this
book was published,
J.
wrote a considerably more
committee principles and
detailed description of clearness
See Chapter Seven in Parker
I
A Hidden
Palmer,
Wholeness: The Journey
Toward an Undivided Life (San Francisco, Jossey-Bass, chapter
is
Scribner,
practices.
2004).
That
Palmer and Megan
reproduced
as
an appendix
The Courage
to
Teach Guide for Reflection and Renewal (San
to
Parker
J.
Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 2007). 3.
White, Once and Future King,
CHAPTER 1.
Marge
Piercy,
p. 183.
VII:
DIVIDED NO MORE
“The Low Road,”
in
The Moon
York: Knopf, 1981), pp. 44-45. Copyright
©
Is
Always Female (New
1980 by
Reprinted by permission of Alfred A. Knopf
Marge
Piercy.
Inc.
3.
(New York: Doubleday, 1990), p. Rosa Parks, Rosa Parfs: My Story (New York: Dial Books, 1992),
4.
Ibid., p.
5.
Jean C. Wyer, “Accounting Education:
2.
Myles Horton, The Long Haul
Expect
1
190. p.
1
16.
16.
It,”
(Tange Where You Might Least
Change, Jan. -Feb. 1993, pp. 15-17.
6.
Ibid., p. 15.
7.
Piercy,
8.
Personal communication from Brother Patrick Hart,
Moon
Is
Always Female, pp. 44—45.
personal secretary.
220
Notes
Thomas
Merton’s
9.
Rumi, “Say Yes Quickly,”
in
man Brooks
\'t.:
(Brattleboro,
Open
Secret: Versions
of Riwii, trans.
(>)lc-
Thresliolc) Books, 1984), p. 27.
AFTERWORD: THE NEW PROFESSIONAL 1.
William Stafford, “A Ritual
and Selected Poems 2.
“EasT: I
The
(St.
Each Other,”
to Reatl to
in
The Way
It Is:
New
Paul, Minn.: Ciray wolf Press, 1998), pp. 7^-7().
Nationa[ikson,
E.,
into,
power implications
141-142
dis-
Ciround rules for dialogue: “clearness committee” approach
of,
57—
to,
155- 161 confidentiality, 160; problems of conventional, 156-
N
1
112
E'xperts, 102,
48-
;
Quaker community,
156;
F Eear:
making them
appear, 111-112
49
Elvaluation: limitations of teacher, 147;
128-131;
157
acknowledging
(mlfWar, 54
teacher’s,
51; behaviors generated by,
H
46—47; createtl through education
Habits of the Heart (Bellah), 70, 71,
structures, 36—40; learning to
control our, 58—61; of losing iden-
81
“Hagia Sophia” (Merton), 63
38; personal types of, 51—58;
tity,
positive effects of, 39—40; under-
Hasidic
standing Student from Hell’s,
Havel,
45-46. See also Emotions
A Hidden
Freedom,
20-21,207
V.,
Wholeness: The Journey
Higher Education Research
(UCLA),
49-
G
Holographic
Gelwick,
Honesty,
1
Three
Institute
193
Highlander Folk School, 175
Galileo, 95
of
13
(Palmer), 21
Frost, R., 107
Gandhi, M.,
1
Toward an Undivided Life
1 1
French Lessons (Kaplan), 26
Gang
of two pockets,
tale
story,
logic,
125-126
10
1
Horton, M., 175
72—74, 154
Human
R., 101
consciousness, 21
Humanistic medical
Generativity: choice between stagnation and, 49; renewal through,
practice: defini-
tion of, 196—197; medical profes-
sionalism renewal to create,
50
“Going Public with
196-199
Spirituality in
Work and Higher Education”
Humility,
1
10
(2000 conference), 193
Grading: evaluation through, 141142;
power represented
1
The Idea of the Holy
by, 142
The Grammar of Science (Pearson),
losing, 38;
embracing, 109—1
meaning
of,
1
10;
13;
1
14
Identity: definition of, 13—14; fear of
55
Great things: community of truth
(Otto),
good teaching coming
from, 10—13;
as
defining
tion, 24;
McMaster
lost
through distor-
reclaiming our teaching,
24—26; shadow side of borrowed,
University’s collective inquiry
27; sources of, 14;
234
Index
through the
Knowledge: community
subjects that chose us, 26-30;
vocations which violate, 31—32
image
of truth
97-109, 103^^-109;
of,
Individualism, 70-71
objectivism approach
to,
52—58;
Inner landscape: education as trans-
objects of, 102, 103^g; as
power
formation exploring the, 192—193;
myth,
questions regarding, 205; value
to,
Integrity: definition of, 14;
Klan, 182
Kunzman,
good
approach
18—19, See also Learning
Ku Klux
of exploring teacher’s, 3—6
57; subjectivity
R., 195
teaching coming from, 10-13; sources of, 14; through the subjects that
tions
•
chose us, 2^6-30; voca-
which
violate,
L
^
Leach, D., 196, 197, 198, 199
31—32
Leadership: building learning com-
Intellectual path, 5
munity, 163-167; community
Intimacy: of personal" relationships,
diversity story on, 161—163;
93-94; of therapeutic model of
failure of coercive
community, 92-93
161—162; “teaching consultant”
approach
Intrator, S., 195
“Inward Journeys: Forms and
League
to,
to,
164
for Innovation in the
Community
Patterns of College Student
approach
College, 193
Learning: civic model of community
Spirituality” (Palmer), 193
applied
to,
94—95;
community of
truth reconstructing dynamics of,
J
Journal of College and Character,
1
93
138;
through
digital technology,
121; evaluation of, 141—142;
K
focusing on, 6—8; “Merlyn”
Das Kapital (Marx), 139
speaking to “Arthur” on value
Kaplan, A., 26—27
of, 166; as
Keller, E. R, 56
act
“Killing the
self,”
King Lear (Shakespeare), 86
“Know
Jr.,
Learning
18,
in
See also
community: ground
need for leadership
new
symbiosis, 100-
in,
161-167;
topics of conversation in the,
149—155; teaching in isolation
101
versus, 146— 149. See also
Knowing: McClintock’s approach
Community; Teachers; Teaching
to genetic, 56—57, 104, 105-106;
objectivist
1
rules for dialogue for, 155-161;
175
thyself,” 3
Knower-known
of teaching,
Knowledge
54-55
King, Martin Luther,
more important than
myth
of,
Letters to a
103^7^—109;
1
(Rilke), 89
“Lit Instructor” (Stafford), 35
physics and notion of, 98—100; the sacred and,
Young Poet
“Little” stories of individuals, 79, 83
13-1 16; subject
“The Low Road”
participation in, 107—109
235 Index
(Piercy), 169
M McClintock, 108,
B.,
Nazis, 182
New
56-57, 104, 105-106,
212-214; educating the, 204—208;
15
1
professional: definition of,
McMastcr University
emotional intelligence role
(Ontario), 128
in the,
Mandela, N., 207
208-212; institutional change for
Marginalized people, 45-44)
medical, 196—202;
Marketing model
of
ward
community,
to
why we
95-97 Marx, K.,
embracing
for-
212—214;
the,
need, 202—204. See
Iso
Education reform; Teachers
149, 140
No
Medical professionalism renewal:
ACXjME
moving
program
for,
Child Left Behind (NCLB), 194-195
196—199;
“Now
humanistic medical practice as
I
Become Myself’
(Sarton), 9
defined by, 196—197; organ donor case study
from
ACXjME
O
retreat,
Objectivism: described, 52; emotions
199-202,207
enemy
Medical school microcosm, 126—141
as
Melville, H., 112
against, 54—58;
Mentors: becoming one ourselves,
for,
26; reclaiming the
power
knowing
T.,
in
mode
a case
of knowing as
myth
of, 104/z^-109;
of
teacher-
121-122
medical
Objects of knowledge, 102, \05fig
school, 126-141; in social
research, 141-135; teaching to
Oliver, M., 91
fill
space using, 124-126
On-stage
reality show’, 28,
40
The Once and Future King (White),
W., 27, 28
Mirroring, 160
145, 166
Moby Dick, (Melville), 12 Mode of knowing: McClintock’s
Organ donor
1
approach
making
a case
centered classroom as fostering,
63
Microcosm approach:
Mills, C.
54—54;
making
subjective in, 52—53;
of our,
21-26 Merton,
of, 209;
case study, 199—202,
207 Otto, R., 114
to genetic science,
56—57; objectivism, 52-58; traditional,
P
51—52
Morton, N., 47
Movements. See
Muhammad
Paradoxes: description Social
movements
of, 69;
hokl-
ing the tension of, 86—90; instinc-
Ali, 120
tive capacity to
hold together,
66-67; learning limits and poten-
N NAACd^
tials
(National Association for
of self through, 69—76; peda-
gogical design and, 76—80; prac-
the Atlvancement of (Colored
ticing in the classroom, 80—86;
People), 175
price paid for splitting, 67—68; of
236
Index
“profound truths” of teaching,
ments driven by fighting against,
65—66; results of broken educa-
206-207
tional,
ments,
68—69; of social move1
Pretending, 90 Professional and Organizational
72; strength-
Development Network
weakness/gift-liahility, 74
High er
Parks, R., 174-176, 179, 207
in
E,ducation, 181
Pearson, K., 54—55
Professor X, 23-24
Pedagogical design, 76—80
Pseudo-movements,
Pedagogy: conventional, 18; design18— ing 19—classroom space, 76—80;
1
82—183
1
McMaster inc]uiry,
Q Quaker community, 156—157
University’s collective
128-131; placing
R
thing (great thing) in center of, 1
student-centered models
19;
19, 122;
Race concept: concept formation
of,
approach
subject-centered,
1
1
1
123; teacher-centered
models
also
understanding, 132-
Relation of Income to
Race table on,
118-119, 120, 121-122.
of,
The
135;
to
Re-membering,
Education; Education reform
“Pedagogy of the Distressed”
Reality:
21
academic transformation of
images
(Tompkins), 29
132^_g
of,
98—99;
communal
Personal Knowledge (Polanyi), 101
nature
of,
Personality types, 68
power
to create virtual, 121; cul-
Personal/public
tural
life
intersection:
97-102; computer’s
answers about, 20; educa-
“self-protective” disconnection
tion 14- reform driven by, 19—20;
and, 18-19; teaching done
either-or thinking fragmenting,
at the,
Physics:
communal metaphors used
in reality of,
knowing
transforming
reality in,
dynamics
stage
of, 28,
29
Rilke, R. M., 1,5,59, 88, 89, 109
99—100; notion of
in, 100;
images of
“A
98—99
Read
Ritual to
to
Each Other”
191 (Stafford), 115-
Piercy, M., 169
Roosevelt, E., 175
Plato, 94
Rumi,
Pogo
show and back-
64—65; on-stage
18
190
J.,
principle, 176
S
Polanyi, M., 101
Power: confusion 34; cultural
of authority with,
The
answers about, 20;
1
of “grace of great things,” 109-1
13;
1
of,
knowledge
141—142;
myth
as, 57; social
of
move-
14; as 1
paradoxical concept,
15;
rediscovering the,
116
grading representing
dynamics
sacred: cultivating a sense of,
Sarton, M., 9
Schumacher, E. E,
237 Index
87, 88
DNA,
Science: discovery of
186-190. See also Education
111;
reform
McCdintock’s approach to genetic,
microcosm, 141-145
56-57, 104, 105-106, 108, 115;
Social research
transforming images of
“Sociological imagination,” 27—19
knowing
in physics,
reality/
98—100
“Soft eyes” practice,
Scott, D., 194'
of,
16
Space: clearness committee approach
Scott-Maxwell, Self: identity
1
F.,
and
40,
90
to creating, 157-161; defined in
context of classroom, 76; develop-
integrity elements
ing skills to open, 146—148; para-
10—14; “killing the,” 54—55;
objectivism on the subjective,
dox applied
52-54; paradox to explore limits
of,
and potentials
of,
69—76;
remem-
to pedagogical design
76-80; resistance to opening
rather than filling the, 145-146;
bering our mentors to reclaim
teaching from the microcosm to
our, 21-26; “sociological imagina-
create truthful, 124—145; teaching
tion” applied to understanding,
to create
27-29; the teacher within invita-
92. See also
tion to
honor
8,
of truth in,
Community
of truth
Speech, 80, 85
true, 40—44; teach-
ing as done by the true,
community
14—17
Spiritual path, 5
Self-knowledge, 25—26
Stafford, W., 45, 191,201,214
“Self-protective” disconnection, 18-19
Stagnation-generativity choice, 49
Service-learning programs, 121
Stapp, H., 99
Sexism, 209
Student from Hell: experience of
Shapiro,
J.,
teaching, 44—45; fear of teacher in
115
Sheepdog metaphor, 152—155
story of, 48; lessons learned from,
Silence, 80, 85
50-51; understanding the fear
Small
Is
driving, 45-46
Beautiful (Schumacher), 87
Social
Darwinism, 98
Social
movements: communities of
Student-centered classroom: abuses
congruence’s language
of, 122;
debate between teacher-
centered and,
of, 179;
differences between pseudo-
1
18—1 19
Students: capacity for connectedness
movement and, 182—184; educa-
challenged by, 40—47; engaging
tion as transformation, 191—214;
them
in
four stages of, 172—174, 192;
Gang
of Three, 72—74, 154; help-
going public
ing
to build, 182—186;
“movement mentality” 172; origins of, 206;
divided
life
of, 171
—
overcoming
of truth,
1
18;
to find their voices, 47; of,
41-44; as
participant-observers in classes, 165 Subject: holographic logic of each,
of, 172;
rewards and accomplishments
them
negative stereotypes
through, 174—181;
paradoxical genius
community
125-126; participation in knowing/
of.
248
Index
community of truth, 107—109;
nity of truth reconstructing dy-
teachers with passion for the, 122
namics
Subject-centerecl classroom: han-
dling a contradiction in
a, 120;
pedagogical advantages
of,
123; teaching to
fill
space
in,
self,
Subjectivity:
1
to create
-18;
moments approach
19—
learning instead
to,
150-151;
of,
community applied
19-120
52—53
6-8; isolation
146-149; marketing model of
of,
to,
microcosm approach
academic bias against,
18-19; objectivism opj'»osition
Cf)mmu-
with drama, 139—140; focusing on
123-135; third of,
1
nity of truth in space, 92; critical
from the microcosm
thing characterization Subjective
1
of,
95-97;
to,
123-135;
paradoxes of “profound truths” of,
to,
52-58
65—66; the self that does the,
13-17; the teacher within
8,
call to,
30—34; therapeutic model of com-
T
•
munity applied
Teacher within voice, 30—34
w’e are, 1—3.
Teacher-centered classroom: debate
Learning
between student-centered and, 1
18—1 19; objectivism fostered
in
to, 93;
who
from
Classroom;
community
Teaching a Stone to
Tal/{ (Dillard),
113
in,
121—122; problems found in the,
“Teaching consultant” leadership, 164
120
Technique:
Teachers: acknowledging our fears
ing, 6;
as,
48-51; exploring the inner
of,
3—6; good teaching from iden-
tity
and
heart, 17—21;
K— 12,
NCLB
mode of
tion as transformation
Learning
in
inquiries about, 4—6;
nique,
6,
9-13,
New
Tompkins,
1
inti-
92—93
of,
J.,
29—30
Management, 95
Truth: implications/suggestions
approach
of,
asking deeper
102; McClintock’s
beyond tech-
genetic, 56—57, 104, 105—106,
18, 149; civic
model of community applied 94—95; colleagues as resources
108, to,
to,
integrity for, 10— 13;
1
15;
52—58; paradoxes of “pro-
approach
to,
Community
commu-
239 Index
to
objectivism approach
found,” 65-66; subjectivity
for,
148—149; as coming from identity
and
of education, 93;
in context
macy
Teaching: act of learning as more 18;
18
Therapeutic model of community:
Total Quality
1
1
teaching
121
Educa-
professional
important than,
reducing
Technologically enhanced learning,
movement;
community;
12;
Tennyson, Alfred Lord, 98
evaluating, 147; with “passion for the subject,” 122. See also
of good teach-
to, 12, 118, 149;
beyond, 9—13,
pressures on
194—195; normal
of du jour,
teaching
life
integrity of, 10-17; losing
in context
18—19. See also of truth
1
u
UCLA
Vietnam War, 54
V
Highec^Eclucation Research
Virtual reality, 121
Vocations: deep gladness sign of the
Institute, 193
“Uncovering the Heart
of
Higher
right, 31;
and
Education: Integrative Learning for
Compassionate Action
in
an
V’oices:
which
integrity,
violate identity
31-32
helping students to find
Interconnected World” (2007
their, 47;
conference), 193
to invite, 78-79, 83; of the teacher
Undivided ties of
lives:
building
communi-
space designed in order
within, 30—34
congruence through,
W
178—181; Pogo principle on choosing, 176; Rosa Parks’s desire
Watson,
for living, 174—178, 179; social
White, T. H., 145
movements driven by
Whitehead, A. N., 53
desire for,
1
1
“Wild Geese”
173-174
(Oliver), 91
Women’s movement,
V
209
\Alvet Revolution (Czechoslovakia),
20-21,206
240
Index
172, 188, 206,
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do with
do with you. Before you
have decided
to live
up
it,” tell
to, let
tell
he writes, “listen for what
your
your
life
what
life tell
truths
your it
life
intends
and values you
you what truths you em-
body, what values you represent.” Sharing stories of frailty and strength, of darkness
and
light.
Palmer
will
show you
not a goal to he achieved hut a gift to he received.
that vocation
is
I
Its
^
*«.
**
;Ki >
‘
"
»