ABSTRACT

Teaching and Learning as a Pedagogic Pilgrimage is premised on an argument that if higher education is to remain responsive to a public good, then teaching and learning must be in a perpetual state of reflection and change. It argues in defence of teaching and learning as constitutive of a pedagogic pilgrimage and draws on a range of scholars and theories to explore concepts such as transcendental journeys, belief, hope and imagination. The main objective of the book is to show how teaching and learning ought to be reconsidered in relation to that which lies beyond the parameters of the encounters, as well as that which is intrinsic to the encounters.

This book gives shape to rituals and routines of engagement and debate, before extending the limitations in deliberative pedagogic encounters to offer desirable outcomes in which both student and teacher can practice a spiritual take on teaching and learning along a continuum of ongoing action. Themes explored in the chapters include the following:

  • Faith and deliberative encounters
  • Post-human ethics of care in teaching and learning
  • Diffracted teaching and learning

This book will be of great interest to academics, researchers and post-graduate students in the fields of philosophy of education, and teaching and learning in the philosophy of education. It will also appeal to school and university educators, policymakers and prospective teachers.

chapter 1|12 pages

Transcending the limitations of argumentation and persuasion

Towards a renewed understanding of deliberative encounters

chapter 3|8 pages

On faith and deliberative encounters

chapter 4|8 pages

On hope and deliberative encounters

chapter 6|10 pages

What makes a good (ethical) teacher?

chapter 9|8 pages

Diffracted teaching and learning

chapter 11|10 pages

Reflections on our pedagogic pilgrimages

chapter |8 pages

Postscript

On the pilgrimage of writing