tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21843852.post114321011538328705..comments2024-01-04T05:57:26.735-06:00Comments on Education Policy Blog: Hosted by the Forum on the Future of Public Education: I am not a caring teacherCraig A. Cunninghamhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/18160288758906798678noreply@blogger.comBlogger6125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21843852.post-1145013529770389592006-04-14T06:18:00.000-05:002006-04-14T06:18:00.000-05:00Of course caring should not be our only priority, ...<I>Of course caring should not be our only priority, but how often is it not a priority at all! I also think it is a pity that caring has to be couched as a 'soft option', a practice confined to women.</I><BR/><BR/>I was making a distinction between our wanting teachers to <I>act</I> in a caring manner and wanting teachers to <I>be</I> caring. The first is fine; the second is dangerous.Sherman Dornhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00491045214079619658noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21843852.post-1145005482474335552006-04-14T04:04:00.000-05:002006-04-14T04:04:00.000-05:00Being new to this blogging community, and to the w...Being new to this blogging community, and to the work of Nel Nodding, I have found this a fascinating discussion thread. I am curious to learn more about Dewey's teacher-student contradiction. Of course caring should not be our only priority, but how often is it not a priority at all! I also think it is a pity that caring has to be couched as a 'soft option', a practice confined to women. Shame on you for not wanting to be called a 'caring teacher'.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21843852.post-1143984294696089982006-04-02T08:24:00.000-05:002006-04-02T08:24:00.000-05:00Before we leave this caring issue behind like a po...Before we leave this caring issue behind like a poor child in an urban classroom, let me say just a couple more things about Noddings’ notion of caring. I agree with you, Aaron, about the need to get beyond the patronizing (and matronizing?) notion of caring as handing out sandwiches or some other guilt-assuaging activity. <BR/><BR/>When I use Noddings with my students, it is in close proximity with Dewey and Freire. And I think that Noddings helps to contextualize Freire’s insistence upon “reconciliation” as the beginning point to the “teacher-student contradiction,” the same contradiction that Dewey refers to as the long-standing war between teacher and student. For Freire, this reconciliation has to occur before liberatory education can begin. It has always seemed to me that Noddings’ ethic of caring provides a well-crafted tool to do just that.James Hornhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04462754705431590571noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21843852.post-1143754687426942252006-03-30T15:38:00.000-06:002006-03-30T15:38:00.000-06:00Just to be clear, I don't have any problem with "c...Just to be clear, I don't have any problem with "caring" as one possible criteria for good teaching, especially in Noddings's sophisticated presentation of this. The problem I have is with a focus _only_ on caring.<BR/><BR/>And my comments about caring and democracy may be hackneyed. However, if (and this is a big if) the current pervasive and almost exclusive focus on caring for individuals tends to shift the field towards an anti-political, anti-democratic perspective, then this, it seems to me, constitutes a real problem. Maybe a focus on caring doesn't produce a general "anti-politicalness." I bet it does, although I'm not sure how one would get at this, empirically.<BR/><BR/>And I mean anti-democratic in terms of collective action, not in terms of helping each individual contribute. "Caring" for the common community (which Noddings is very uncomfortable with, by the way) seems, to me at least, unlikely to foster much critical action or engagement. Handing out sandwiches to homeless people will never have much impact on the problem of homelessness--and this, it seems to me,is where "caring" for the community generally ends up, whether we like it or not. It's like the difference between social action groups and service learning groups.Aaron Schutzhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/10667097977144954236noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21843852.post-1143513506386387892006-03-27T20:38:00.000-06:002006-03-27T20:38:00.000-06:00There are a couple of points that I will make rega...There are a couple of points that I will make regarding Nel Noddings. I will leave the subject of virtue ethics in teacher education for another time. <BR/><BR/>From my reading of Noddings, there is nothing I can find that is anti-intellectual in her call for schooling grounded in the ethic of caring. The Latin grammar school masters of the 19th Century (the protectors of academic rigor mortis) certainly did denigrate the Pestalozzian “soft pedagogy” based on moral suasion that Mann imported, but this pedagogy was formulated before women were recruited as more affordable employees than the male teachers they would come to replace. The fact that women were believed to be more nurturing was an argument that Mann used only when he wasn’t talking to the monied interests whose favor he had to curry in order to sell the idea of tax-supported schools.<BR/><BR/>The sad fact is that, as Jane Roland Martin has pointed out, work related to the reproductive needs of society has always been seen as less important than the manly tasks of production, whether those tasks are aimed at producing goods or producing knowledge. In her case for a gender-sensitive pedagogy, Martin makes the point that the nurturing capacity that has normally been associated with women has recently come to be denigrated by, otherwise, liberated souls (both male and female) who would now insist that women adopt the historically-favored traits of hard-nosed male if she is to be taken seriously in this previously all-male members-only reservation of production. Why not, Martin asks, allow and expect men to be nurturing (or caring), too, thus allowing men to exercise an often-atrophied aspect of their psyhes, while acknowledging the important work that women have done for eons.<BR/><BR/>Second point: Noddings is careful to point out that caring is, indeed, not a virtue—but is, rather, a skill that must be taught if we are to see any evidence of it in a democratic society that some would say we should care about if it is to preserved and grown. The belief that caring is a virtue is widespread, even among women. Notice how many teachers are dumbstruck when they act as a carer and students don’t automatically respond as cared-fors. Caring is a relational skill that has to be taught and learned, at home and at school, much the same way as everything else that can’t be memorized—by modeling, dialogue, practice, and confirmation.<BR/><BR/>The fact that we should expect teacher candidates to come to understand this as part of their professional preparation appears to me to so obvious as to require no defense. One of the reasons that foundations is seen by some to be faltering is that foundations people sometimes don’t grasp the opportunity to make these connections between theory and practice when they are offered by people like Noddings who has done a fair amount of both.<BR/><BR/>In regards to this hackneyed dichotomy of individual vs. group, this is just more digital thinking. I would guess that Nodding, as a good analogic neo-pragmatist, might say that democratic communities, unlike anthills, exist in order to promote the happiness of the individuals whose contributions to said communities constitute them as such. Every individual, then, who is enabled to reach for that happiness by that caring community, receives that care, acknowledges it, and subsequently, becomes the carer for the preservation of that community. But that is just a guess by another white guy.James Hornhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04462754705431590571noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21843852.post-1143431065222159782006-03-26T21:44:00.000-06:002006-03-26T21:44:00.000-06:00I tend to see Noddings not in terms of her vision ...I tend to see Noddings not in terms of her vision of relational virtues, but instead as the current embodiment of a particular vision of the teaching relationship. In some ways, Noddings is the inheritor of a vision of what I am calling "liberationist" education that reached its pinnacle in the now largely unread writings of Paul Goodman and Alexander Neill. It is the idea that the job of teaching should focus _only_ on actualizing the unique capacities of other individuals, and their ability to interact authentically and in a caring way with each other. In this sense, although I very much respect the sophistication and subtlety of Noddings's conception, there is nothing much new, here.<BR/><BR/>Sherman is right that the idea of "caring" has become increasingly pervasive in teacher education. For example, NCATE defines its mission as embodying the belief that "every student deserves a caring, competent and highly qualified teacher." E.g., the two key characteristics are competence and caring. (see: www.teac.org/literature/ teacandncateframeworkscompared.pdf).<BR/><BR/>In many ways, however, Noddings's vision is anti-democratic. It participates in a general evacuation in schools of any significant vision of political action that goes beyond individual responses to others. There is no room for collective identity of any coherent sort in her vision of caring.<BR/><BR/>Noddings's vision is, fundamentally, middle class as much as it is feminist. It is a vision of a world populated by empowered individuals with the power to choose their own destiny, and focuses on the moral imperative of enhancing the unique perspectives of others. Speaking generally, working-class and poor people don't see themselves as isolated individuals. Caring, for those on the margins, often takes on a much more collective aspect, and is integrated into a sense of mutualism, self-defense, against an often threatening world. (This is not a denial of individuality, but can frame this issue in very different ways).<BR/><BR/>I wonder if it is even possible to link a focus on "caring" for individuals (even though it nessesarily includes issues of race, gender, etc.) to the general decline of the influence of foundations in education. By helping to eliminate visions of collective resistance from our lexicon, it may weaken our focus on the social structures schools are embedded in. But this may be too much of a "conspiracy theory."<BR/><BR/>I'm not really up on the "care" literature, but for a fascinating discussio of caring, class, and race, see<BR/>Michele Lamont's (2002) _The Dignity of Working Men_. Audrey Thompson also wrote a couple of extremely insightful articles on caring and social position that make points simlar to Sherman's. I also wrote about the relationship between Noddings and democracy in Ed Theory a few years ago.<BR/><BR/>--AaronAaron Schutzhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/10667097977144954236noreply@blogger.com