Indirect education : : exploring indirectness in teaching and research / / Herner Saeverot.

Indirect Education discusses direct and indirect pedagogies and the complexities of these concepts within the field of education practice and research. It addresses the question of when it is most beneficial to be indirect with regard to teaching and educational research. The book offers an original...

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Bibliographic Details
Superior document:Theorizing Education
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Place / Publishing House:London ;, New York, New York : : Routledge,, [2022]
©2022
Year of Publication:2022
Language:English
Series:Theorizing education series.
Physical Description:1 online resource (140 pages)
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Table of Contents:
  • Cover
  • Half Title
  • Series Page
  • Title Page
  • Copyright Page
  • Table of Contents
  • List of illustrations
  • About the author
  • Acknowledgements
  • Introduction: Expanding the forms of education
  • Education needs both directness and indirectness
  • The concepts of direct and indirect
  • The design of the book
  • References
  • Chapter 1: Justification: Education is indirect by nature-so what's the problem?
  • Increased awareness of indirectness through communication theory
  • Being indirect, yet controlling the intermediaries
  • Bold actions and permissiveness
  • Examples of beneficial uses of indirectness
  • Summing up
  • Notes
  • References
  • Films
  • Chapter 2: Teaching: Four forms of teaching. Excerpts from observations at a secondary school
  • Introduction
  • Categories of analysis
  • Direct instruction
  • Indirect summoning which is specified
  • Indirect summoning which is unspecified
  • Findings
  • Direct instruction
  • Indirect summoning which is specified
  • Indirect summoning which is unspecified
  • Outlines for a fourth model of teaching: Direct-indirect teaching
  • Discussion
  • When did the teachers make use of direct and indirect approaches?
  • Findings as basis for new hypotheses and further research?
  • Note
  • References
  • Chapter 3: Communication: Janus-faced forms of indirect communication. Teacher interview and thought experiments
  • Irony
  • The concept of irony
  • The case of two foreign boys
  • The case of Elisabeth
  • Seduction is young and beautiful, deceit is old and ugly
  • Two forms of educative deceit
  • To be educated directly by deceit
  • To be educated indirectly by deceit
  • Existential communication through pictures
  • Coming into existence
  • Composing oneself poetically versus letting oneself be poetically composed
  • The D-Effect
  • A Kierkegaardian repetition of Anti-Climacus' thought experiment.
  • Which pedagogical measures can teachers take to prevent students from becoming detrimental by indirect forms of communication and at the same time open up to the students the educative aspects of such forms of communication?
  • Irony combined with humour
  • Educated or deceived by the deceit?
  • The teacher as nobody
  • Conclusion
  • Notes
  • References
  • Films
  • Chapter 4: Ethics: Where is the boundary between the ethical and the unethical regarding teachers' indirect actions? A case study
  • What is bullying?
  • The case
  • An exemplary method?
  • Is Bjørndal's method just to all the students involved?
  • Indirect method
  • Bjørndal's unorthodox and indirect method
  • Why did Bjørndal choose an indirect method?
  • Direct communicative form
  • Commanding tone
  • Discontinuous education?
  • Who is responsible for preventing bullying?
  • Is it the students' responsibility to prevent bullying?
  • Delegation of responsibility with no educational training
  • The repercussions of Bjørndal's method and means
  • 'The bullies' and 'the victim'
  • Power as an indirect educational means
  • Adoption
  • Shame
  • Indirect coercion and responsibility based on a third person
  • Is Bjøndal's method ethically legitimised?
  • Could Bjørndal have acted indirectly in an ethically legitimate manner? A hypothetical alternative to Bjørndal's method
  • Note
  • References
  • Chapter 5: Time: How may 'genuine time' be an integral element in a student's existence? A case study
  • Introduction
  • Dewey, time and interaction
  • Description of the observation 'object' and a typical school situation
  • A day in the life of John
  • How was John met by the teacher and the teacher's assistant?
  • How may 'genuine time' become an integral element in John's being?
  • Conclusion
  • References
  • Chapter 6: Education research: The direct and indirect paths of education research.
  • Introduction
  • Indirectness through ETN
  • Two things at stake
  • ESS as an indirect source of knowledge for ETN
  • Directness through ETK
  • To think educationally about education
  • Problems associated with the directness of ETK and the indirectness of ETN
  • Indirectness through ETH
  • SE emerges as an autonomous discipline through the combination of directness and indirectness
  • Notes
  • References
  • Chapter 7: The educational researcher: Ironic indirection and the 'I' in education research
  • Introduction
  • The omniscience in education research-some problems
  • The outside-in perspective and problems related to EP
  • The inside-out perspective and problems related to EP
  • Educational research in and on EP
  • Ironic indirection
  • Irony pointing outward-destruction and hyper-intensifying change
  • Irony pointing inward-governance and self-education
  • Conclusion: Unsettling the omniscience in education by way of irony
  • References
  • Afterword: The wisdom of teachers. A conversation with three teachers
  • Reference
  • Index.