The three readings I chose were: A Richer, Broader View of Education (2015); Is Teaching a Practice (2003); and Learning from Our Students (2004).
Here were some thoughts that I had while reading it:
- As we have discussed before in class, Noddings puts a great deal of emphasis on student choice (e.g. "...provide the guidance students need to make wise choices among them," (p 236, 2015)). Are the kinds of choices she talks about possible?
- Noddings (again in 2015) states, "we should ask what each child can do and how we might help him or her to find an opportunity to do it," (p 236). How does this jive with the "spirit" of accountability? I guess what I'm asking here is - how do we accommodate students this way in spite of accountability?
- A good question raised by Is Teaching a Practice, I thought, was: Does teaching imply learning? Noddings seems to imply a two-way relationship between them in Learning from Our Students, but I wonder if the case can be made that is is not a two-way relationship?
- What do you think Noddings was speaking of when she says, "many of a teacher's acts do not have learning as the intention"? (p 243, 2003).
- On page 246, Noddings (2003) states that, "It is not the subjects themselves that induce critical thinking, but the ways in which they are taught and learned." What do you think a Scholar Academic might say to that?
That's enough to get you started, I'd wager - and also, who was major jealous of Noddings' time to read for pleasure as listed on page 158 of Learning from Our Students? I totally wrote in my margin: #lifegoals.
Happy Monday from Philadelphia!