Teaching in Unequal Societies
This book considers teaching in modern institutional settings, among other things, as the ethical questioning and reversal of passively accepted prejudices, particularly in contexts of diversities and inequalities. Its thematic focus is the ethics of teacher-learner and learner-learner relationships within the democratic setup, and the possibilities of critique and transformation emerging out of such a relationship.
The first theme of the book is diversity and pluralism, the second is the question of inequality in such contexts of radical diversity. With respect to this question, an unavoidable phenomenon of our times is the capitalisation of education and the reductionist view of learners as customers and consumers of knowledge. The approach to education that sees students merely as skilled human resources to be readied for the job market militates against critical thinking and do not respond appropriately to the questions of diversity and inequality. Thus, a significant focus of the book is the impact of inherited inequalities of caste and race on classroom ambience and teachers' interventions in the modern institutional context. The pertinent question is the increasing unwillingness of teachers to recognise and challenge discriminatory views and play their role in social transformation. In this regard, the teaching and learning of the humanities is also investigated. Teaching and the traditional classroom, it is often said, may not be required in the future as machines and remotely located teachers/explicators might claim their place. Hence, another question of focus is whether such a future would be hospitable to the critical task of education to cultivate young citizens of democracies.

1135253449
Teaching in Unequal Societies
This book considers teaching in modern institutional settings, among other things, as the ethical questioning and reversal of passively accepted prejudices, particularly in contexts of diversities and inequalities. Its thematic focus is the ethics of teacher-learner and learner-learner relationships within the democratic setup, and the possibilities of critique and transformation emerging out of such a relationship.
The first theme of the book is diversity and pluralism, the second is the question of inequality in such contexts of radical diversity. With respect to this question, an unavoidable phenomenon of our times is the capitalisation of education and the reductionist view of learners as customers and consumers of knowledge. The approach to education that sees students merely as skilled human resources to be readied for the job market militates against critical thinking and do not respond appropriately to the questions of diversity and inequality. Thus, a significant focus of the book is the impact of inherited inequalities of caste and race on classroom ambience and teachers' interventions in the modern institutional context. The pertinent question is the increasing unwillingness of teachers to recognise and challenge discriminatory views and play their role in social transformation. In this regard, the teaching and learning of the humanities is also investigated. Teaching and the traditional classroom, it is often said, may not be required in the future as machines and remotely located teachers/explicators might claim their place. Hence, another question of focus is whether such a future would be hospitable to the critical task of education to cultivate young citizens of democracies.

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Teaching in Unequal Societies

Teaching in Unequal Societies

Teaching in Unequal Societies

Teaching in Unequal Societies

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Overview

This book considers teaching in modern institutional settings, among other things, as the ethical questioning and reversal of passively accepted prejudices, particularly in contexts of diversities and inequalities. Its thematic focus is the ethics of teacher-learner and learner-learner relationships within the democratic setup, and the possibilities of critique and transformation emerging out of such a relationship.
The first theme of the book is diversity and pluralism, the second is the question of inequality in such contexts of radical diversity. With respect to this question, an unavoidable phenomenon of our times is the capitalisation of education and the reductionist view of learners as customers and consumers of knowledge. The approach to education that sees students merely as skilled human resources to be readied for the job market militates against critical thinking and do not respond appropriately to the questions of diversity and inequality. Thus, a significant focus of the book is the impact of inherited inequalities of caste and race on classroom ambience and teachers' interventions in the modern institutional context. The pertinent question is the increasing unwillingness of teachers to recognise and challenge discriminatory views and play their role in social transformation. In this regard, the teaching and learning of the humanities is also investigated. Teaching and the traditional classroom, it is often said, may not be required in the future as machines and remotely located teachers/explicators might claim their place. Hence, another question of focus is whether such a future would be hospitable to the critical task of education to cultivate young citizens of democracies.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9789388630917
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 09/17/2020
Pages: 384
Product dimensions: 5.52(w) x 8.82(h) x 0.98(d)

About the Author

John Russon is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Guelph (Canada), and Director of the Toronto Summer Seminar in Philosophy. He is the author of eight books, including Human Experience (2003), Bearing Witness to Epiphany (2009), Sites of Exposure (2017) and Adult Life (2020). He has also written extensively on contemporary European philosophy, German Idealism and ancient Greek philosophy.

John Russon is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Guelph (Canada), and Director of the Toronto Summer Seminar in Philosophy. He is the author of eight books, including Human Experience (2003), Bearing Witness to Epiphany (2009), Sites of Exposure (2017) and Adult Life (2020). He has also written extensively on contemporary European philosophy, German Idealism and ancient Greek philosophy.

Siby K. George is Professor of Philosophy at the Department of Humanities and Social Sciences, Indian Institute of Technology Bombay. He writes on development, technology, pain and dying, political ethics, education and subjectivity, employing the resources of contemporary continental philosophy and specifically emphasising nonwestern and Indian contexts. He is author of Heidegger and Development in the Global South (Springer, 2015) and is an editor of Cultural Ontology of the Self in Pain (Springer, 2016).

P.G. Jung is Associate Professor of Philosophy at the Department of Humanities and Social Sciences, Indian Institute of Technology Bombay. During 2014–2016 he was Fellow at the Indian Institute of Advanced Study, Shimla. His publications are largely in the fields of philosophy of language, history of ideas, and the philosophy of everydayness. He is an editor of Cultural Ontology of the Self in Pain (Springer, 2016).

Table of Contents

The Ethics of Teaching: In Place of a Foreword
Krishna Kumar
Introduction: The Unequal Classroom
John Russon, Siby K. George and P.G. Jung

Part I Education: Philosophy and Context
1. The Importance of a Philosophical Education in Contemporary Society: Dewey and the University Curriculum
John Russon
2. Waiting for a Socrates: Kant's Educational Vision and Macaulay's Civilising Mission
P.G. Jung and Roshni Babu
3. The 'Debased Native Mind' in Colonial Discourse: Education Policies in 19th-Century Gujarat
dhara k. chotai

Part II Ethics of Teaching: Principles and Cases
4. Teaching Self-Respect: The Very Idea
Apaar Kumar
5. On the Ethics of Teaching: The Lessons of Athenian Democracy
Patricia Fagan
6. From Walls to Bridges: Education as Dialectic and the Educator as Curator of the Affective Conditions of Dialogue
Kym Maclaren
7. Education for Democracy: Philosophical Reflections Inspired by Brazil's Movement of Landless Rural Workers
Bruce Gilbert

Part III Ethics of Teaching: Indian Perspectives
8. Can Pedagogies Be Both Critical and Caring?
Kanchana Mahadevan
9. 'Why Johnny Can't Read': Seeking a Response through the Art of Teaching
Ranjan Kumar Panda
10. Reconstructing a Critical Ontology of Education through an Ethics of Care: Critical Pedagogy, the World View of the Ao Naga Tribe, and Care Ethics in Dialogue
Amrita Banerjee and Karilemla
11. Environmental Education in Schools: Perspective and Challenges
Rinzi Lama
12. Caste in the Classroom: An Ethical Interrogation
P. Kesava Kumar
13. Prejudice and the Pedagogue: Teaching in a Democratic Classroom
Siby K. George

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