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Article
‘I Intend Not to Roll My Eyes When I Don’t like My Partner’: Fourth-Graders’ Intentions to Care
Studying Teacher Education
  • Colette Rabin, San Jose State University
Publication Date
3-9-2022
Document Type
Article
DOI
10.1080/17425964.2022.2049739
Abstract

This self-study describes my year-long investigation to create caring community in my fourth-grade classroom. An introspective and dialogic pedagogy of intention-setting revealed students’ experiences of taken-for-granted uncaring. This window into students’ experiences afforded me opportunities to model care. Intentionality, dialogue, and collective commitment helped students learn to conceive of their own justifications and methods for caring across differences of ability, culture, and race. The sensitivity of self-study to my students’ learning gave me patience and courage in the unchartered and uncertain process of pedagogical innovation. The students’ inclinations to care imply possibilities for a care (versus duty) based morality.

Keywords
  • Care ethics,
  • relational ethics,
  • moral education,
  • social emotional learning,
  • classroom management
Comments

This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Studying Teacher Education on March 9, 2022, available online: http://www.tandfonline.com/10.1080/17425964.2022.2049739

Citation Information
Colette Rabin. "‘I Intend Not to Roll My Eyes When I Don’t like My Partner’: Fourth-Graders’ Intentions to Care" Studying Teacher Education (2022)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/colette_rabin/77/