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Title: Relational learning and (well) being


1
Relational learning and (well) being
Leigh Burrows Learner Wellbeing Professional
Learning 12.3.10
2
Sigmund Freud
  • Education, healing and governing are the three
    impossible professions.
  • In Britzman, D. (2009). The very thought of
    education. NY Suny Press

3
  • The Claremont Study (in Bingham Sidorkin,
    2004) identified the main issues affecting
    American public education as identified from
    inside the classroom by students, teachers,
    parents and administrators as being
    relationships.
  • Participants feel the crisis in schools
  • is directly linked to human relationships
  • (i Bingham Sidorkin, 2004, p5)
  • Bingham, C Sidorkin, A (2004)
  • The Pedagogy of Relation an introduction
  • In No education without relation. Peter Lang.

4
A relational paradigm in education?
  • A focus on the opportunities for growth through
    generating new forms of connectedness that can
    foster the wellbeing of everyone involved
  • In creating mutually enhancing connections we
    can transform all the institutions in our lives,
    from school to workplace to home (p22)

5
Relational learning
  • Effective relationships and trust
  • are pivotal in facilitating learning
  • (Rogers, 1983, in Bingham Sidorkin, 2004)
  • Trusting, personal relationships are the bedrock
    of academic success
  • (Erickson, 1987 in Bingham Sidorkin, 2004)
  • Bingham, C Sidorkin, A (2004)
  • The Pedagogy of Relation an introduction
  • In No education without relation. Peter Lang.

6
  • Teaching is building educational relations
  • ( Bingham Sidorkin, 2004, p6)
  • Educational relation exists to include the
    student in a wider web of relations beyond the
    limits of the educational relation (p6)
  • Relations are not necessarily good
  • (p7)
  • Bingham, C Sidorkin, A (2004)
  • The Pedagogy of Relation an introduction
  • In No education without relation. Peter Lang.

7
Intrinsic motivation for learning?
  • Sidorkin (2002) argues that students lack an
    intrinsic motivation for learning in an
    institutional environment - which is the basic
    condition of schooling.
  • He sees the only way to get around this
    obstacle is to either
  • force students to learn using a host of direct
    and indirect forms of violence that educators
    have invented over the centuries
  • build a community where kids will love their
    teachers and will agree to do the school stuff
    too (p.128)

8
Weaving the connections through relational
practice
  • Domestic violence service
  • Holiday and after school care
  • Steiner/waldorf community school
  • HS spec ed and English teacher
  • Learning difficulties support team
  • HREOC cases
  • ENU
  • Learner Wellbeing team- seconded
  • Flinders University
  • consultancy
  • Relational learning topic
  • Aiming to create wellbeing generating contexts
    for vulnerable young people
  • A recurring theme - autism

9
Working relationally?
  • While there had been a number of positive
    outcomes from a holistic and relational way of
    working, that I had developed in the field, at
    that time I lacked a sophisticated understanding
    of the theoretical underpinnings
  • I needed a coherent philosophy to assist me
    to stay true to my own values and beliefs in the
    face of the community opposition I at times
    encountered through advocating a relational
    approach to autism.
  • PhD ARC Linkage project.

10
  • I felt awed by the power of relationship and
    connection to make changes, even when there is a
    total deficit in emotional attachment, as in
    autism  
  • Through my work I had begun to see that many of
    these young people were slowly able to become
    what Emmet (2000) calls a little self who is
    emotionally connected to his family and others
    (p2) with a gradual reduction in their
    difficulties in relating
  • However, having learned to do something is
    not the same as understanding why it works
  • (Sidorkin, 2002, p10).
  • Many successful educators often do not realise
    the reason for their success according to
    Sidorkin (2002)

11
Working relationally?
  • Autism is characterised by a deficit in the
    essence of relating, closeness and connection,
    limited capacity for imagination and a tendency
    towards fixation
  • The culture around young people with autism can
    also be characterised by difficulties in
    relating, closeness and connection
  • And perhaps even by a limited capacity for
    imagination and a tendency towards fixation.

12
No education without relation
  • There is a very practical need for relational
    theory that can penetrate the world of practical
    teachers thinking and mainstream policy making
  • (Bingham Sidorkin, 2004)

13
Towards a pedagogy of relation
  • A shift from a pedagogy of behaviour to a
    pedagogy of relation.... If we can get teachers
    to pay attention to relationships rather than
    behaviours it will be a step forward (p4)
  • There is a lack of teacher authority in
    schools which necessitates the development of a
    pedagogy of relation (p5).
  • sidorkin.net/pdf/towardPR.pdf
  • How do I know if my classroom relationships are
    of trust, respect and care?

14
a pedagogy of relation
  • To understand a school one needs to understand
    its relational field which is unique for each
    school
  • (Sidorkin, 2002)
  • We need to pay less attention to what we
    do and more to the relational context in which we
    do those things (p129).
  • According to Sidorkin (2004) good schools
    definitely feel right which can be part of what
    defines a good school.
  • Mums gut instinct replaced by facts

15
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16
Assessing relational contexts
  • Jordan (1998) describes dominant anti-relational
    biases in Western culture
  • Aggressive or dismissive attitude towards
    vulnerability
  • Tendency to blame the victim
  • Active devaluing of empathic responsiveness
  • Objectification of human beings
  • Creation of judgments about superiority and
    inferiority around difference

17
At the school Id like, wed have..
  • Enough pencils and books for each child.
  • Laptops so we could continue our work outside and
    at home.
  • Drinking water in every classroom, and fountains
    of soft drinks in the playground.
  • Clean toilets that lock, with paper and soap, and
    flushes not chains.
  • Large lockers to store our things.
  • A swimming pool.
  • No grading, so we don't compete against each
    other, but just do our best.
  • Teachers treat us as individuals, where children
    and adults can talk freely to each other, and our
    opinion matters
  • Children on the governing body, class
    representatives and the chance to vote for the
    teachers.
  • A school for everybody with boys and girls from
    all backgrounds and abilities,

Images of The School I'd Like from Burke and
Grosvenor (2003)
18
School cultures
  • Schools for Sidorkin (2002)
  • comprise a multitude of conflicting interests
    of teachers, administrators, different groups of
    students, parents, political and ideological
    parties etc
  • Sidorkin, A. (2002). Learning Relations, impure
    education, deschooled schools and dialogue with
    evil. New York Peter Lang, p132).
  • Similarly Hargreaves (1992) argues that
  • School culture is made up of
  • competing groups like loosely connected and
    often antagonistic city states. (p320)
  • This can often be reflected in the staff room
  • Hargreaves, A. (1998a) The emotional politics of
  • teaching and teacher development with
    implications for
  • educational leadership, International Journal of
  • Leadership in Education, 1, pp. 315336.

19
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20
Teacher relational wellbeing
  • According to Hargreaves (1998a),
  • teachers most extreme and negative
  • feelings appear when they talk about
  • their colleagues
  • the structures of schooling
  • the effect of changing educational policies upon
    them
  • Hargreaves, A. (1998a) The emotional politics of
  • teaching and teacher development with
    implications for
  • educational leadership, International Journal of
  • Leadership in Education, 1, pp. 315336.
  • Teacher behaviours directly shape
  • the relational qualities of the
  • classroom (Avenell, 2009)
  • (in Avenell, 2009, Relational Pedagogy.
    Australian Educational Leader. 31 (2). pp31-2. In
    topic reader

21
Why can the relational view be difficult for a
number of educators ?
  • For Noddings this has to do with the Western
    tradition of individualism
  • An unwillingness to accept that while no
    individual can escape responsibility for his or
    her actions, neither can the community that
    produced him or her escape its part in making him
    what he or she has become.
  • Noddings, N (nd ) Caring in education. Available
    at
  • http//www.infed.org/biblio/noddings_caring_in_edu
    cation.htm.
  • http//
  • Also for Noddings it has to do with the
    widespread notion that teacher knows best, that
    teachers are expected to know and to be able to
    provide answers
  • We do need to know and initiate the young into a
    community of knowing
  • But we cannot be sure what everyone needs to
    know......

22
Building positive relationships?
  • Teachers work
  • (DECS 2001)
  • Relationships for learning
  • The teacher should develop and maintain working
    relationships which support a cooperative,
    collaborative and congenial learning climate and
    foster links and foster links with the home and
    community

23
Relationships for learning and wellbeing
  • Effective relationships and trust are pivotal in
    facilitating learning.
  • (Rogers in Bingham Sidorkin, 2004)
  • Trusting, personal relationships are the bedrock
    of academic success
  • (Erickson, in Bingham and Sidorkin, 2004)

24
What is a good teacher?
Mitchell Weber (2007). Thats funny you dont
look like a teacher UK Taylor Francis.
25
A good student teacher
26
Getting on the students wave lengths
  • educators beginning with the assumption that they
    know nothing of the internal experience of the
    student since pre-judgements do little to foster
    genuine inquiry in the learning relationship
  • the capacity of the educator to have empathy and
    secondly, to communicate empathy to the student.
  • this means the learner having a sense of the
    educators contactfulness or presence
  • Erskine, R (1997)Theories and methods of
    integrative transactional analysis in Relational
    Schools available at
  • http//www.relationalschools.com/

27
Student teacher relationships
  • Teachers are more likely to view as problem
    students and to discipline them - those whose
    learning styles are least similar to their own
  • (ONeil, 1986, in Kise (2007)
  • Some classroom management problems are due to
    clashes between teachers and students who are
    direct opposites - eg
  • perceiving and judging
  • sensing or intuition
  • thinking or feeling
  • (Jungian/Myers Briggs types)
  • Kise, J (2007). Differentiation through
    personality types. Corwin Press.

28
Relational wellbeing providing school support
for young people with Asperger Syndrome
  • The focus is on an alternative, relational
    wellbeing approach that aims to increase the
    capacity for relatedness and everyday wellbeing
    for vulnerable young people
  • ARC Linkage Flinders/DECS research overall
    topic wellbeing
  • Case study research 6/7 teacher assisted to
    provide a more dynamic and enabling classroom and
    school environment for Jack an 11 year old with
    Asperger Syndrome who had expressed a deep sense
    of isolation, loneliness and a craving for
    friendship.

29
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30
Restoring the pathways to relational wellbeing
and learning
  • A relational approach to practice and inquiry
    requires us to be intellectually, spiritually,
    emotionally and bodily engaged, with flexibility
    and at a true willingness to listen, see and
    understand
  • (Finlay Evans, 2009, p109)
  • Developing a young persons capacity for social
    interaction and understanding alongside
    supporting the capacity of parents and
    professionals to find his or her wavelength
    through participating in mutually enjoyable,
    meaningful and developmentally tailored
    activities.
  • (PhD research- case study)

31
  • The future wellbeing of the planet depends
    significantly on the extent to which we can
    nourish and protect not only individuals or even
    groups, but the generative process of relating
  • (Gergen (2009)
  • For Avenell (2009) this means that as educators
    we all need to model and live out the behaviours
    for establishing positive relationships (p32).

Thank you
leigh.burrows_at_flinders.edu.au
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