Generating living-educational-theories with love in transforming excessive teacher entitlement

Whitehead, Jack ORCID logo ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9644-0785 (2024) Generating living-educational-theories with love in transforming excessive teacher entitlement. In: Ratnam, Tara and Craig, Cheryl, (eds.) After excessive teacher and faculty entitlement: expanding the space for healing and human flourishing through ideological becoming. Advances in Research on Teaching, 47 . Emerald Publishing, Leeds, UK, pp. 167-182. Full text not available from this repository.

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Official URL: https://doi.org/10.1108/S1479-368720240000047011

Abstract

This chapter explores the implications of acknowledging one's own excessive entitlement and living contradictions in contributing to Living-Educational-Theory Research. The analysis emphasises the importance of accepting one's educational responsibility for one's own continuing professional development in inquiries of the kind that address this query: ‘How do I improve my professional educational practices in education with values of human flourishing?’ This responsibility includes making public evidence and values-based explanations of educational influences in learning, in contributing to the global knowledge base of education. The notion of excessive teacher entitlement was coined by Ratnam to characterise the putative deficit view of teachers that is projected onto them. Craig (2013) developed Schwab's concept, the teachers' ‘best-loved self’, to embrace teachers' input in promoting the learning and well-being of all in the institutions they serve (Ratnam & Craig, 2021). My experiences of being a living contradiction are grounded in a tension between my best-loved self and my experience of excessive entitlements. Living educational theories research in which individual practitioner-researchers generate their validated, evidence- and values-based explanations of educational influences in their own learning, in the learning of others and in the learning of the social formations that influence their practice with values of human flourishing, have helped me leverage the potential for growth afforded by this tension. The perspective draws insights from the disciplines of education including Habermas's Critical Theory. It also includes insights from other methodologies such as autoethnography, action research, phenomenology, self-study and narrative inquiry.

Item Type: Book Section
Publisher: Emerald Publishing
ISBN: 9781837978786 / 9781837978779
Departments: Institute of Education > Non-Initial Teacher Education
Additional Information: Chapter ten within book.
Depositing User: Anna Lupton
Date Deposited: 01 Oct 2024 08:34
Last Modified: 01 Oct 2024 08:34
URI: https://insight.cumbria.ac.uk/id/eprint/8417
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