The Active/Ethical Professional: A Framework for Responsible Educators
A winner of the 2012 Critics Choice Book Award of the American Educational Studies Association (AESA).

The Active/Ethical Professional proposes an ethical framework for educators and school leaders who find their practice constrained by the demands of policies and structures created in response to accountability legislation. The framework is derived from Michel Foucault's theories of discipline, surveillance, resistance, and care of the self.

Gunzenhauser asserts that an educator's dual position of being normalized (especially in relations with those above them in the education hierarchy) and normalizing (especially in relations with their students) can be troubling and difficult. The book argues that this position requires educators to be both "ethical" and "active." To be ethical, educators not only need to resolve ethical dilemmas in defensible ways, but they also need to recognize themselves as powerful in relation to others. To be active, educators need to be vigilant for moments when they are placed in the position to be "reactive" to normalizing pressures, and they also need to develop clear notions of how they may create opportunities for the cultivation of educational selves - selves that are rich ethically, aesthetically, epistemologically, and politically.
1111575231
The Active/Ethical Professional: A Framework for Responsible Educators
A winner of the 2012 Critics Choice Book Award of the American Educational Studies Association (AESA).

The Active/Ethical Professional proposes an ethical framework for educators and school leaders who find their practice constrained by the demands of policies and structures created in response to accountability legislation. The framework is derived from Michel Foucault's theories of discipline, surveillance, resistance, and care of the self.

Gunzenhauser asserts that an educator's dual position of being normalized (especially in relations with those above them in the education hierarchy) and normalizing (especially in relations with their students) can be troubling and difficult. The book argues that this position requires educators to be both "ethical" and "active." To be ethical, educators not only need to resolve ethical dilemmas in defensible ways, but they also need to recognize themselves as powerful in relation to others. To be active, educators need to be vigilant for moments when they are placed in the position to be "reactive" to normalizing pressures, and they also need to develop clear notions of how they may create opportunities for the cultivation of educational selves - selves that are rich ethically, aesthetically, epistemologically, and politically.
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The Active/Ethical Professional: A Framework for Responsible Educators

The Active/Ethical Professional: A Framework for Responsible Educators

by Michael G. Gunzenhauser
The Active/Ethical Professional: A Framework for Responsible Educators

The Active/Ethical Professional: A Framework for Responsible Educators

by Michael G. Gunzenhauser

eBook

$46.75 

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Overview

A winner of the 2012 Critics Choice Book Award of the American Educational Studies Association (AESA).

The Active/Ethical Professional proposes an ethical framework for educators and school leaders who find their practice constrained by the demands of policies and structures created in response to accountability legislation. The framework is derived from Michel Foucault's theories of discipline, surveillance, resistance, and care of the self.

Gunzenhauser asserts that an educator's dual position of being normalized (especially in relations with those above them in the education hierarchy) and normalizing (especially in relations with their students) can be troubling and difficult. The book argues that this position requires educators to be both "ethical" and "active." To be ethical, educators not only need to resolve ethical dilemmas in defensible ways, but they also need to recognize themselves as powerful in relation to others. To be active, educators need to be vigilant for moments when they are placed in the position to be "reactive" to normalizing pressures, and they also need to develop clear notions of how they may create opportunities for the cultivation of educational selves - selves that are rich ethically, aesthetically, epistemologically, and politically.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781441164667
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Publication date: 03/08/2012
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 200
File size: 312 KB

About the Author

Michael C. Gunzenhauser is associate professor in the School of Education at the University of Pittsburgh. He is a philosopher of education and qualitative research methodologist, and studies epistemology and ethics as they relate to social justice projects in education and educational research.
Michael C. Gunzenhauser is associate professor in the School of Education at the University of Pittsburgh. He is a philosopher of education and qualitative research methodologist, and studies epistemology and ethics as they relate to social justice projects in education and educational research.

Table of Contents

Preface
1. The High-Stakes Accountability Context
2. Accountability as a Philosophical Problem
3. Ethics in Educational Practice
4. From Accountability (for Test Results) to Responsibility (for Children)
5. Normalization, Surveillance, and the Self-Disciplined
6. Care of the Educated Self in Crisis
7. Educator Professionalism: The Active, Ethical and Resistant
8. The Active/Ethical Professional in Practice
Appendix: Studies of Accountability and School Reform
References
About the Author
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