Trust and Schooling

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Academic Teachers
Category=JNAM
classroom management strategies
community of inquiry
critical thinking pedagogy
critical thinking skills
Critically Reflective Practice
education personal philosophy
educational philosophy
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Extra Sense
Fair Work Act
Fiduciary Duties
Fiduciary Relationships
Follow
Moral Trust
Neurobiological Substrate
neurobiology of education
Operational Trust
Personal Philosophy
PESA
reflective practice
reflective practice trust role
school community
Social License
Strategic Trust
Student Engagement
Student Partnership
Teacher Performance Appraisal
trust dynamics in educational institutions
Trust Relations
Violates
Virtue Ethics Framework
Warranted Assertability
Wo
Zealand Curriculum

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032839165
  • Weight: 360g
  • Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 24 Jun 2024
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Unlike many current approaches, this book looks at trust relations in order to understand schooling and other social practices. Trust relations include both what an individual is prepared to trust in the circumstances, and what a competent practitioner in an evolving tradition should trust. It is therefore considered whether trust relations are more fundamental in society than those of truth or power.

Schooling has a social, as well as an education, role. As a result, the scope of the trust relations under investigation must range beyond the pedagogical. By expanding our understanding of the trust relations required to create and maintain effective schooling in particular circumstances, it may be possible for a greater section of society to receive a good education. Issues including curriculum, classroom management, and community relations may be understood in a different way and help enable currently intractable problems to be tackled more effectively.

This book presents the initial investigations of a number of authors who collaborated on this project and was originally published as a special issue of the journal, Educational Philosophy and Theory.

Bruce Haynes FPESA FPES is a University Fellow at the College of Indigenous Futures, Arts, and Society at Charles Darwin University, Casuarina, Australia. He retired after 34 years in teacher education, and since then, in collaboration with others, he has investigated the place of trust in schooling.