How do I improve my educational
relationship with the learners I work with, both adults and children?
DRAFT
Louise Cripps, Educational Enquiry,
October 2007.
4504 Words
I have organised
my thoughts as follows:
Why I think
educational relationships are important;
Why I want to
improve my educational relationships;
Finding an
appropriate way of researching how to improve my educational relationships;
My 'big
educational picture';
My found and
created knowledge;
Creating a
reflective space for learning;
Found Knowledge;
The
importance of creating communities of learners;
Nurturing
Educational Relationships;
How do I open a
respectful space for others to learn with me?
How do see myself
modelling the learner I want my pupils to be?
So
what have I learnt about how to improve my educational relationship with the
learners I work with, both adults and children?
Why I think
educational relationships are important
In listening to
the stories of others concerning their own learning, people very readily identify
others who were key to their learning choices and experiences. Many teenagers
make curricular choices based on the teacher rather than the interest they have
in a subject. When adults are asked to reflect on their own school experiences,
they will usually identify a teacher who either enabled or disabled their
engagement and ability to learn from school. These adults are often also able
to express frustration that they, and their efforts weren't recognised or
valued, and were often dismissed.
In my own
experience as a teacher, I can see that the most effective learning takes place
in the educational relationships which exist in a learning community. My
understanding of an educational relationship is one built on mutual value and
respect where a truly equal exchange of understanding takes place (Maturana,
2007, Appendix 1). A relationship where the learner is known and recognised as
an individual, and learning is a collaboration rather than an imposition. I
think that researching educational relationships of this quality could lead to
the new language of education that Biesta (2006) is calling for from his
analysis of the limitations of a language of learning.
"One
of the central ideas of the book is that we come into the world as unique
individuals through the ways in which we respond responsibly to what and who is
other. I argue that the responsibility of the educator not only lies in the
cultivation of "worldly spaces" in which the encounter with otherness and
difference is a real possibility, but that it extends to asking "difficult
questions": questions that summon us to respond responsively and responsibly to
otherness and difference in our own, unique ways." (Biesta, 2006, p. ix)
Why I want to
improve my educational relationships
Just as I realize the
importance of educational relationships, so I want to know how to improve the
educational relationships I have so I can be as effective as possible both as
an educator and as a learner. It is the need to improve what I am doing as an
educator which has driven my need to research. I need to find an appropriate
and apposite way of researching this for myself. I want the learners I work
with to know that they are known and intrinsically valued, I want them to know
that there is recognition and affirmation. I want them to be able to engage
with and be excited by asking their own questions about the world, and to be
skilled enough to be able to communicate their understandings in the most
appropriate way.
Following Eisner (1993) I
agree that 'we do research to understand. We try to understand in order to
make our schools better places for both the children and the adults who share
their lives there.'
Finding an
appropriate way of researching how to improve my educational relationships
The significance
for educational knowledge of researching the processes of improving educational
relationships has been highlighted by Schon (1995) who claims that educational
researchers need a new epistemology and that this will emerge from action
research.
Eisner (1993) asserts
'if there are different ways to understand the world, and if there are
different forms that make such understanding possible, then it would seem to
follow that any comprehensive effort to understand the processes and outcomes
of schooling would benefit from a pluralistic rather than a monolithic approach
to research'
In a previous
paper Eisner (1988) points out that we can often limit our representations by
trying to use words to convey an understanding when other representations would
be more effective, 'I hope we will even learn how to see what we are not
able to describe in words, much less measure. And, through the consciousness
borne of such an attitude, I hope we will be creative enough to invent methods
and languages that do justice to what we have seen.'
And so although I
have tried to explain with words the nature of the educational relationships I
am engaged with, the images from the two video clips below more powerfully
convey what I want you to experience about my understanding of educational relationships.
My 'big educational picture'
I have been Head Teacher in a primary school for almost 5 years and as I worked on this
assignment I discovered the application letter I wrote for my current job. In
the section on 'Philosophy and Practice of Education' I wrote:
'Children are at their most successful as learners when
they feel confident to tackle new challenges. They need to know they have
intrinsic value, and this needs to be constantly affirmed by the adults around
them in the way they're respected and listened to. As their strengths are made explicit to them and built upon
so self esteem is developed and a
positive attitude is engendered towards tackling new challenges.' ( Letter of application
2002)
It was really pleasing for me to find this evidence of what I
was thinking in 2002, because I can see what I believed then to be of
fundamental importance as an educator.'
In clarifying this to myself, I hope to be able to see more
clearly how I can more effectively create the learning environment founded on
positive educational relationships
which best supports the
values I hold to be crucial, as well as modelling the way in which I learn
them.
My found and created knowledge
While
I was in the Victoria Art Gallery in Bath one day before Christmas 2006, the
ideas about my understandings about educational relationships finally began to
surface. All the inputs my mind had received in so many ways, began to be
accessible to me in a way I could begin to articulate. I began to perceive my
thoughts about learning as a collection of discrete but connected images The
thoughts were very tentative, and I was concerned that I might forget, so I sat
and wrote, amongst the sculptures and inspired by them.
It
seemed to me that as I looked and enjoyed these sculptures it helped me to see
a way in which I could try to work out and communicate to myself and others my
understanding of the nature of educational relationships, I began to think it
would be helpful for me to look at my own insights as they occurred as a
collection of sculptures at an exhibition, and particularly the exhibition I
was sitting in the middle of, based as it was on the mixture of a juxtaposition
of found and created objects, invested with a variety of memories for the
artist, which worked together to form a new understanding for the engaged
observer.
In
order to focus on the particular gallery which holds the current collection in
my mind about educational relationships , I think it is helpful to establish
the context of the exhibition
which provoked this particular metaphor.
The exhibition of
sculptures was entitled Paradise, and the work which engaged me a great deal
was created by a local artist, Edwina Bridgeman. I found the sculptures
inspiring and thought provoking, combining a variety of elements in a
stimulating way. I felt I was invited to interact with the sculptures, someone
else's ideas and thinking was made visible to me, and in turn provided me with
an opportunity to make new meaning as I brought my own experiences to what I
was seeing. These meanings may never have been the purpose of the artist, but
they acted as a provocation to my thinking and understanding. It also helped me to clarify my own
thinking in response to what I was seeing and understanding.
I find this
experience paralleled by my engagement with the thinking and writing of others.
During the course of this module, I have been particularly engaged by the work
of Carol Dweck concerning the limitations learners can put on their own
learning by their mindset. I have
found I am revisiting the ideas, and that they are having a direct effect on
the messages I convey to the children I work with. On one Tuesday evening this
extract was shared, which I found very powerful because it asserted something I
found very hopeful,
'Just because
some people can do something with little or no training, it doesn't mean that
others can't do it (and sometimes do it even better) with training. This is so
important because many, many people with the fixed mindset think that someone's
early performance tells you all you need to know about their talent and their
future'. Dweck, 2000)
My involvement
with Dweck's work and thinking came about because her assertions about the
development of artistic ability were very relevant to my thinking about my own
learning, and the development or limitation of creativity.
As I look again at
this, I also realise that it is more than the work itself, it is because I was
able to see how her ideas had impacted the thinking of another, and it was in
discussion about her ideas that the co-creation of new knowledge began, as
those ideas were formulated in a new context. So I am aware that although I
feel I learn experientially, I also welcome the opportunity to make sense of
what I've experienced in the
company of others with whom I have an educational relationship.
As I present my
own thoughts based on my own experiences and perceptions of educational
relationships , in a similar way, as an exhibition of separate but connected
insights on a theme, I will explore the use of this metaphor to help me develop
my understanding and discover more
clearly what I value in my own learning in terms of educational relationships,
and how this impacts on the way I try to enable learning to happen.
Creating a
reflective space for learning
The gallery itself
is physically a peaceful and restful space full of inspiration. It is all the
more peaceful because it contrasts with the noise and business of the city
centre. When I'm there I feel it reflects the need in me as a learner to find a
reflective space to access what I really think and feel in the busyness of my
mind. I need the space to know what I think, and that for me is when learning
occurs. All the input has happened from a bombardment of sources, and my mind
is now able to make connections in some kind of free fall, like the connections
on a mind map. I understand now, that for me learning occurs when I have space
in my head to assimilate ideas. I have also been able to identify this in the
primary school learners I have worked with for 20 years, and it raises the
question for me about creating the need for reflective space in educational
relationships.
Found Knowledge
When I first
experienced the 'Paradise' exhibition at the end of 2006, I wrote,
'I love the
ideas of Paradise conveyed here. The mixture of found materials and
manufactured, the way the artist has saved and stored up materials until they
can be of use. It taps into my idea of memories stored, being accessed again
and bringing ideas to life and visualisation, affirming and strengthening what
could be just a random collection of thoughts. There is a sense of important
memories being used physically to bring alive current and future thinking.' I
looked at the sculptures in the space allotted to them and felt that they each
had a story to tell which would contribute to the big picture. My first level
of understanding was of the big picture, which drew me on to look at the detail
of each piece. It is hard to take in all the detail in one go, so each piece
needs to be visited again and again. So I feel it is with learning. It is more
than alright, it is necessary for me to revisit something I'm trying to
understand. So now I'm realising that I need opportunities to look again and
again at an idea, and maybe from different angles, and space in which to do it.
During the course
of this reflection I have often become frustrated by my lack of ability to
identify and remember people and experiences which have been key influences in
helping me find a way to form and sustain the educational relationships I
aspire to. It is hard for me to identify a starting point, and just as hard to
bring to the foreground and honour
the influences which have been so key. My interpretation of the composition of the
sculptures provides me with hope that the stored memories will be accessed in
part, and will bring life to my current and future thinking as I engage with
the ideas of others currently.
The
importance of creating communities of learners
But for me as a learner, learning goes
beyond the acquisition of knowledge or skills, there needs to be a response
involved. Watching live music, rather than listening to a recording of the
music marks something of the difference between an individual learning from a textbook
or the internet, and the shaping of the learning in discussion with another
person. It requires an educational relationship. The learning engages more
readily, and goes deeper, when an emotional response is also required. The
opportunity to process my reflections on my learning experiences such as I
experience with the Masters group at the university, brings the learning to
life. In embracing the value of wanting to co-create a learning space within
the classroom, I recognise it is not something that can be communicated in
words alone, but rather in the living out of that belief or value and the
evidence presented needs to communicate those qualities.
So I really
appreciate the fact that I currently belong to three regular communities of
learners. I am part of the learning community of Swainswick School, and in
particular the class which I co-teach. I am part of the Master group of
learners, and I'm also part of an educational community of Headteachers who
meet regularly to reflect on how we can live our educational values more fully
within the educational contexts and external constraints we are face with.
I am aware that I
am a part of all three communities even when I'm not present with the people
who form the communities, and all hold supportive yet challenging
accountability for me. The communities become linked in my learning, as I learn
and develop my ideas about the nature of educational relationships through
observation and reflection in one context, and generalise those understandings
to the other contexts. So maybe this is one learning community with three
different centres.
Through this
account I will offer multi media narratives as forms of evidence that are
consistent with the relational values I hold and which form my living educational
standards by which I judge my practice and seek to improve it. Rayner
highlights the importance of understanding relational values from a perspective
of inclusionality when he writes:
Our thinking,
language, mathematics, science, art, theology, management and educational
systems thereby deepen from what breeds opposition, hegemony, waste and
conflict to what brings mutual understanding, diversity, sustainability and
co-creative relationship. (Rayner,
2007)
Nurturing
Educational Relationships
I
readily listen to the ideas of others, and am energized by working hard to
understand what another might mean, by either spoken or written word, and this
engagement shapes my thinking and my way of being which is recognized by
others. The following clip illustrates the strength of the educational
relationships which lie at the heart of our Tuesday Masters group. I feel the
visual image captures the engaged flow of ideas which Jack engenders by the
quality of the educational relationships he facilitates as he leads this
particular community of learners.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qu_YSX7SlI0
I also feel this quality of
receptive responsiveness as I watched the 2 minute video-clip of the educational
relationship between Louise and me as we explore possibilities for Louise's
writings. (Whitehead,
2007)
How do I open a
respectful space for others to learn with me
Human beings seek recognition of their own worth, or of the people,
things, or principles that they invest with worth. The desire for recognition,
and the accompanying emotions of anger, shame and pride, are parts of the human
personality critical to political life. (Fukuyama, 1992, p. xvii)
As educators we
have the responsibility and privilege on a daily basis to communicate and
affirm a child's intrinsic value to them. It's no good just believing it
ourselves, or in telling children that they are special regardless of what they
can or can't do which is going to make any difference to them. It needs to be
in the way we live and learn alongside them. A crucial aspect of this is in the
time we have for others, and our willingness to spend time in listening to
them, and in really hearing what they say.
As significant
adults the verbal and non-verbal responses we make in our discussions with
children both individually and in various size groups, are incredibly important
and rewarding.
Although as
educators, we often control the classroom agenda, it is as we are willing to
share the learning agenda with others that true engagement in learning is more
likely to flourish. The more we are able to show the areas we need support in,
the balance of power changes. It is our need that leaves space for others to
lead the learning. It is not absolving us of our responsibility. If as leaders of learning we are always
self sufficient, we leave no room for others to lead the learning. We deny
others the opportunity to learn what they are capable of.
We are privileged
to be part of those experiences when learners verbalise their understandings,
and try to develop their understanding. Our responses both verbal and non
verbal need to affirm these sometimes tentative thoughts. As we listen to these
responses, they provide windows or insights into the mind of the learner and
the way they are thinking which then provides for a co-creative learning space.
Listening to others share their insights and understanding provides the
opportunity to make explicit aspects of the learning process as it makes
learning visible.
People only learn
about their intrinsic value from the responses of others, so for many learners,
or for many aspects of learning, it is only in relationship with others that we
formulate what we really understand. Learning is never developed in a vacuum,
although knowledge can be acquired in a solitary state.
Our responses to
others in many different situations show clearly and consistently to an
objective observer how we view them. Children are often more aware of this than
we are as adults. They know what it feels like. They can all too readily be conditioned to believe certain
limitations about themselves, just from the responses they ate given. So we can
inadvertently create real barriers to learning.
However the power
is in our hands to ensure the children receive the positive messages of self
worth and ability to learn. As we know children will learn from what we do, not
from what we say. There is nothing as strong as example.
How do see
myself modelling the learner I want my pupils to be
The following
video clip shows one of the communities of learners exercising what I believe
to be positive educational relationships
as they work collaboratively to develop new understanding. As I watch
this I see the qualities of educational relationships I seek to develop more
fully amongst this community of
learners.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7Ck_ECxcaEc
I offer these
reflections on the learning session so you can see what it is that I intend
when I talk about effective educational relationships, and what it is that I am
trying to improve.
Firstly it puts me
into a position which I really value, which is of being able to learn alongside
other learners, and to work collaboratively with them in a genuine attempt to
work together.
I really
appreciate the flow of focused conversation between us all as we try out
different understandings. The conversation also requires the learners to be
understanding each other and their difficulties with understanding, and so
there was a reflective quality built in.
There was no
imposition by anyone on the others on the group. I felt that I, as a learner,
wasn't pushed or rushed into being able to do something at the expense of
really understanding it, and I also felt that the others in the group felt in
the same position although we all had different levels of knowledge or
understanding about the task.
Throughout the
activity at the time, I was very aware of the way in which the knowledge and understanding was being woven
throughout us all. This activity couldn't have happened without the relational
flow between the learners in the group.
There was a real
connection between the four of us as learners as the ideas passed from one to
another.
Geraldine starts
off with the knowledge, but wants to share it. It was her challenge to help us
understand.
Louis very quickly
shows that he knows what it was all about, and keeps testing what he sees against the ideas already in his head.
Edward quietly watches, and is given the
space to keep working out what is happening. I am aware that at the beginning
he is as puzzled as I am, but my perception is that he is seeking clarity in
the same way as me. This is reinforced for me by watching the video, when near
the beginning we unconsciously mirror the same kind of thinking body language.
I am aware with Edward with a breakthrough moment when amidst all the chat, he
quietly reaches out and picks up the cards to try something out. At that stage
I don't think it quite works out,
but Edward I think has found a new
theory to pursue.
Also in terms of
the dynamic of the group, each respects the learning of the other and makes
space for it. I feel too, that there is real respect for each other as well as
the learner. This activity isn't just a polite exchange of ideas, it is real
collaboration.
There are separate
conversations and exchanges happening throughout as well, but not to the
exclusion of others in the group.
I want to know
what Louis' understanding is because I am fascinated by what his thinking is,
and he is able to articulate it. He wants to know what my thinking is because
he wants to understand where I am, so he can show me more clearly how to
understand. Although we all know each other, we haven't worked in exactly this
way together before, and I'm thinking that it makes explicit the quality of
relationship which must exist, and which I greatly value as an educator, but
which I wouldn't take for granted.
As I watch the
clip, I'm also fascinated about what the other learners bring in terms of their
gifts, and I'm challenged about the importance of providing opportunities for the learners I'm responsible for
to develop their gifts.
Louis has really
appreciated the chance to work specifically with like minded people where he
know his ideas will be understood. Although he had developed an understanding
very quickly he was happy to wait to explain what he understood. He gave that
to the group, and helped us all develop our understanding in an inclusional way.
Geraldine gave us
a clear demonstration, and was also very patient in helping us understand, and
gave us clear pointers without feeling she had to dominate or be the one who
knew. She too was able to read the group and each of us in it, and give us the
space we needed.
Edward had the
capacity to stay with the task, to listen and watch, and build his
understanding in that way.
I feel pleased by
my role in the group, as it's how I want to be as an educator. I'm very happy
learning alongside others. I want people's ideas to be heard, and I want people
to feel valued. I really enjoy engaging with the ideas of others, trying to
understand what they're thinking by what they say. Like Louis, I find it
helpful to know where people are in their thinking and understanding. As an
educator if I know that, I can more readily help others move forward in their
understanding, and as a learner I can move forward in my own thinking and
develop my own understanding.
Having a clip like
this is a gift which helps me to reflect and understand more about what it is
in my own practice and values which are really important to me, and in
discussing it with others, it gives it credence to what I believe in as an
educator, and helps to strengthen both my values and practice.
Jack Whitehead's reflections
on this clip affirm the qualities that I am seeking to evidence in my practice
(Appendix 2).
So what have I learnt about how to
improve my educational relationship with the learners I work with, both adults
and children.
Through
carrying out this enquiry, I have affirmed for myself the importance of building educational relationships, I
have recognised myself in connection with others as part of a community of learners. I have had the
opportunity both to articulate and show the nature of educational relationships
in action. I have considered the power of opening an educational space for
others, and come to understand much more about the balance of laying down power
in order to empower others to lead the learning. I have learnt that it is an
important question to continue to pursue.
In making explicit what I have learnt so I
know more fully the worth of what I want to improve. As I watch Jack at work,
and myself as part of a group of learners, I see more clearly what I value and
what I want to improve. I continue to work towards an understanding of how to
bring that more fully into the classroom, which is based on a bedrock of
valuing others and finding ways to engage with them.
Biesta, G. J.
J. (2006) Beyond Learning; Democratic
Education for a Human Future. Boulder; Paradigm Publishers.
Buber, M. (1961)
Between Man and Man, London & Glasgow; Fontana.
Cripps, L. (2002)
Letter of Application. Unpublished letter.
Dweck, C. S.
(2000) Self-Theories: their role in motivation, personality, and development.
Philadelphia, PA
19196; Psychology Press.
Eisner,
E. (1988) The Primacy of Experience and the Politics of Method, Educational
Researcher, Vol. 17, No. 5, 15-20.
Eisner,
E. (1993) Forms of Understanding and the Future of Educational Research.
Educational Researcher, Vol. 22, No. 7, 5-11.
Fukuyama, F.
(1992) The End of History and the Last Man, London; Penguin.
Schšn, D. (1995) The New Scholarship Requires a New Epistemology.
Change, Nov./Dec. 1995 27 (6) pp. 27-34.
Whitehead, J. (2007) How do I
improve my educational relationship with Louise Cripps in the creation of my
living educational theory? An educational enquiry. Unpublished draft, 7 June
20.
Appendix 1
The Student's Prayer
'Don't
impose on me what you know, I want to explore the unknown. And be the source of
my own discoveries. Let the known be my liberation, not my slavery.
The
world of your truth can be my limitation; Your wisdom my negation. Don't
instruct me; let's walk together. Let my richness begin where yours ends.
Show
me so that I can stand on your shoulders. Reveal yourself so that I can be
something different.
You
believe that every human being can love and create. I understand, then, your
fear when I ask you to live according to your wisdom.
You
will not come to know who I am by listening to yourself. Don't instruct me; let
me be. Your failure is that I be identical to you'
Umberto
Maturana (1/07/07)
http://www.school-survival.net/poetry/the_students_prayer.php
Appendix
Two
Jack
Whitehead's reflections on the video-clip.
For example, in the
following 5 minutes 57 seconds video-clip, Louise is participating in the
collaborative creation of understandings with her pupils in a way that shows
her educational relationship and influences in the learning of her pupils.
Louise holds her pupils within an inclusional gaze that for me can be
distinguished by what Martin Buber refers to as the humility of the educator
and by the recognition of values in the glance of the educator:
"If
this educator should ever believe that for the sake of education he has
to practise selection and arrangement, then he will be guided by another
criterion than that of inclination, however legitimate this may be in its own
sphere; he will be guided by the recognition of values which is in his glance
as an educator. But even then his selection remains suspended, under constant
correction by the special humility of the educator for whom the life and
particular being of all his pupils is the decisive factor to which his
'hierarchical' recognition is subordinated." (Buber, p. 122, 1947)