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Perceptual Vignettes. Phenomenological Reflective Thinking and Professional Attitude

A Study and Practice Guide

Erschienen am 30.09.2024, 1. Auflage 2024
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Bibliografische Daten
ISBN/EAN: 9783781526686
Sprache: Englisch
Umfang: 243 S.
Einband: kartoniertes Buch

Beschreibung

Perceptual vignettes are the result of a phenomenological method applied in pedagogical practice and research. This method includes perception, description and phases of reflection and supports the development of a professional inclusive attitude and diagnostic competence. The processbased way of working with perceptual vignettes asks us to defer idealtypical patterns, categorizations of all kinds, judgements and prognoses and to look more closely at each persons situation. The book is intended as a study and practice guide and includes theoretical foundations and the practical application of the method as well as themebased exercises in perception, writing and reflection.

Produktsicherheitsverordnung

Hersteller:
Julius Klinkhardt GmbH & Co. KG
Robert Klinkhardt
info@klinkhardt.de
Ramsauer Weg 5
DE 83670 Bad Heilbrunn
www.klinkhardt.de

Autorenportrait

Ulrike Barth, PhD, professor for transformativ and inclusive pedagogy at the Institute for Waldorf Education, Inclusion and Intercultural Studies of Alanus University, Mannheim, Germany.

Inhalt

Preface to the English edition ............................................................................. 9 1 Perceptual vignettes in teacher education. Introduction.............................. 11 Acknowledgements............................................................................................. 16 Part I Perceptual vignettes as phenomenological method in education 2 Phenomenological-methodological foundations of working with perceptual vignettes............................................................................... 19 2.1 The ‘things themselves’: phenomenological reduction and givenness (Husserl, Marion)................................................................................... 23 2.2 The givenness of bodily selfhood in intuition (Husserl, Marion)............. 27 2.3 ‘Being-with’ and bodily existence (Heidegger, Merleau-Ponty, Böhme)...................................................... 29 2.4 Attention generates horizon (Husserl, Merleau-Ponty, Waldenfels)......... 33 2.5 Understanding and recognition of alienness and otherness (Heidegger, Husserl, Lévinas, Waldenfels).............................................. 36 2.6 Intentional or misleading empathy? (Fuchs, Breithaupt, Breyer)............. 40 2.7 Goethean phenomenology – a path of development. Excursus............... 42 3 Perception and observation: two phenomenological approaches ................ 47 3.1 Atmosphere as the primary object of perception..................................... 49 3.2 Perception as open, intentional attending with all senses........................ 54 3.3 Observation as attentive turning to the world......................................... 61 3.4 Exercises in perception, observation and thinking ................................. 68 3.5 Perceptual vignettes show traces of attention.......................................... 77 4 Wonder as a phenomenological-pedagogical capacity of ‘being-with’ ............................................................................................... 81 4.1 Everyday wonder in the work with perceptual vignettes......................... 83 4.2 Philosophical excursus: wonder is beginning ......................................... 90 4.3 Wonder and alienation in children......................................................... 93 4.4 Widening the pedagogical horizon with wonder .................................... 98 4.5 Wonder precedes knowledge. An outlook ............................................ 100 5 Writing perceptual vignettes – a creative phenomenological method ....... 104 5.1 ‘I examined the writing’....................................................................... 105 5.2 Problems and system of phenomenological description........................ 107 5.3 Perceptual vignettes as body-oriented phenomenological descriptions............................................................. 111 5.4 Do phenomenology and creativity contradict or complement each other?................................................................... 113 5.5 Using the four-stage model for the phenomenological, creative writing of perceptual vignettes................................................. 118 5.6 Variations of phenomenological texts: phenomenological descriptions, vignettes, anecdotes, memory pictures and perceptual vignettes ........................................... 124 5.7 Writing perceptual vignettes ................................................................ 130 Part II Using perceptual vignettes in (special needs) education 6 Developing a professional pedagogical attitude ........................................ 135 6.1 Attitude – habitus – beliefs – ethos ...................................................... 136 6.2 Beliefs versus attitude .......................................................................... 140 6.3 Professional attitude in (special needs) education ................................. 141 6.4 Professional pedagogical attitude and inclusion ................................... 144 6.5 Professionalizing pedagogical attitude .................................................. 147 6.6 Exercises for developing pedagogical ethos .......................................... 150 7 Perceptual vignettes as media of reflection ................................................. 161 7.1 Reflection in the discourse on education ............................................. 162 7.2 Reflective capacity vs reflective competence/reflexivity ......................... 164 7.3 Excursus: from analysis to synthesis ..................................................... 165 7.4 Preliminary conclusion and starting point for our actions .................... 167 7.5 Implications for training or teacher education ..................................... 167 7.6 Excursus: a working model based on biographical theory .................... 170 7.7 Levels of reflection with perceptual vignettes ....................................... 170 7.8 The reflection spiral of the perceptual vignette method ........................ 173 7.9 Examples of reflective processes ........................................................... 174 7.10 Excursus: phenomenology in relation to inclusion and exclusion – ableism ....................................................................... 184 7.11 Reflection in training: outlook ............................................................. 186 8 Perceptual vignettes in preparatory exercises for diagnostic competence........................................................................... 188 8.1 Diagnostic competences in transition..................................................... 188 8.2 Sympathetic diagnosis vs categorization.................................................. 192 8.3 Perceptual vignettes complementing the ‘child conference’..................... 195 8.4 Phenomenology in diagnosis.................................................................. 197 8.5 Perceptual vignettes as a medium of sympathetic diagnosis..................... 198 8.6 Exercises in pedagogical diagnosis........................................................... 200 8.7 The potential of perceptual vignettes in pedagogical diagnosis. Outlook ................................................................................................ 211 9 Perceptual vignettes for innovative professionalism in education. Outlook ....................................................................................................... 213 Indices .............................................................................................................. 221 Quoted perceptual vignettes and other descriptive texts................................. 221 Bibliography.................................................................................................. 223 The authors ...................................................................................................... 243