Sunday, October 22, 2017

#88, "The Courage to Teach"

"The Courage to Teach"
by Parker J. Palmer

This is a beautifully written book. Palmer has invested a substantial amount of thinking in the topics he talks about, and his depth of scholarship and carefully considered language is reflected in every weighted sentence. The text is part memoir, described in encounters, failures and successes along his career as an educator, and part prescriptive guide for teachers to rediscover their identities as humans and teachers, and ultimately for reforming the state of modern education for the good of all.

Palmer addresses three entities, each larger than the last: the teacher, communities of teachers, and finally teaching institutions. Teachers, he says, must connect, or reconnect, with themselves in order to really fulfill their identities as teachers. There is quite a bit of mystic and Buddhist terminology here, as he exhorts us to "listen to the inner teacher" and "find your truth." From a Christian perspective, I found that once I filtered his terminology into true statements, it made more sense for me. I agree with his premise, that we must live, or strive to live, "undivided" lives, though I think we disagree on what that means. I think, too, that once we--teachers especially, but really all humankind in general--once we have found our identities, we ought to live in community with others, and that real progress can be made once honest, open community is established. He ends by examining some aspects of educational reform, and presses the reader to live with integrity for what is right, even at the cost of prestige, power, or paycheck; a sentiment I stand behind myself. When integrity is gone, from the classroom, the pulpit, the home, we have become hollow men and hollow women. Anyway, I will not philosophize, even though the Mariana-level depth of the thoughts and writing in this book make it hard not to reciprocate with philisophication.

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