Teaching what Can't be Taught: The Shaman's Strategy

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Scarecrow Press, 2002 - Education - 175 pages
The current educational culture of standards, accountability, and creeping educational capitalism finds teachers increasingly teaching laundry lists of facts and skills. Less attention is being paid to the 'big picture' or worldview. Author David Rigoni offers an alternative perspective. Using a shaman metaphor, he examines how the most important learning in a professional program takes place between the lines of the formal curriculum. He argues that this worldview change ought to be intentional and that all aspects of the educational process ought to work to that end. To clarify what is needed, the book then looks to educators from throughout history who worked with their students with a total focus on changing their worldviews. These educators, of course, are the shamans.

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Contents

The Paradox of Teaching and Learning
41
The Shamans Strategy
65
A Case Study
101
Copyright

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About the author (2002)

David Rigoni is an associate professor and chair of the Teacher Education Department at the University of St. Thomas in Minneapolis, Minnesota. He has 14 years classroom experience as a high school English teacher.

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