Constellating Emotional Dialogues in Secondary Education

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A01=Emily Wilkinson
Author_Emily Wilkinson
autoethnographic analysis of teacher experiences
autoethnography
Category=JNAM
Category=JNC
Category=JNF
Category=JNMT
Category=JNU
dialogic teaching
Education
educational equity studies
emotion studies
emotional labor in schools
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
intersectional teacher identity
LGBTIA+ education
mental health pedagogy
narrative
pedagogy
qualitative classroom research
research
rhetoric
rural education
secondary English
secondary trauma in education
self-historiography
teacher identity
writing-instruction

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032776798
  • Weight: 480g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 17 Jul 2025
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This innovative, autoethnographic study examines 12 stories of “wobble” moments—looking at “wobble” as an emotional experience—to illuminate new perspectives on LGBTQIA+ identity, school violence, racism, mental illness in students and teachers, and the emotional costs of empathy.

Utilizing the author’s experiences as they navigate education’s most difficult years of practice from 2020 to 2022 and extending the existing scholarship on dialogical pedagogy and teacher identity by offering a framework that goes “beyond wobble,” it provides a new theory for how teachers can deconstruct the emotions that surround the heaviest moments of their practice, shift perspectives on situations and selves, and “see the light” of compassionate possibility in both person and practice.

A sobering inquiry which provides valuable insight into the emotional landscape of a contemporary classroom embroiled in America’s culture wars and serves as a poignant exemplar of dialogical pedagogy in practice, it will appeal to scholars and post-graduate students of teacher education, educational psychology, and education policy.

Emily Wilkinson is an educator specializing in autoethnography and emotion. They are a recent graduate of Columbia University’s PhD program in English Ed., where they studied the intersections of emotions, dialogical pedagogy, conservatism, and queerness in a rural middle school classroom. They currently teach social studies in Northern California, USA, is Teacher Consultant with the Bay Area Writing Project, and serves as the secretary of the Genders and Sexualities Equality Assembly of the National Council of Teachers of English.

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