Gateway to the Dao-Field: Essays for the Awakening Educator
Powered By Xquantum

Gateway to the Dao-Field: Essays for the Awakening Educator By Av ...

Chapter 2:  The Shadowy Edges of the Path: Shifting Power From the Teacher to the Students
Read
image Next

Recognition of Some Educators Who Came Before

My ideas build on the efforts of many educators, scholars, and teachers of all kinds. What follows is a very brief description of the work of some selected humanistic writers and practitioners in the field of education who foreshadowed my work.

Harold C. Lyon, Jr. (1971) writes about the importance of emotions and also of education that addresses the whole person. He writes,

Humanistic Education, the integration of cognitive learning with affective learning, is a natural outgrowth of Humanistic or Third Force psychology which has grown in large part as a reaction against the fact that the more academic psychologies (Behaviouristic and Freudian) seem inadequate in dealing with the higher nature of humanness of man. (p. 3)

Lyon’s emphasis on integration of intellect and feeling resonates in my work. I have gone further and discuss the importance of inter-subjective experience, inner experience, and the classroom as a deeply democratic community in development.

C. H. Patterson (1973) writes about self-actualization, feelings, and groups in education. He also writes about the humanistic teacher:

Research indicates that good teachers and poor teachers cannot be differentiated on the basis of teaching ‘methods.’…The method is inseparable from the person of the teacher; in fact, the person of the teacher is more important than the method. (p. 97)

I am in agreement with Patterson. He describes the characteristics of good teachers and how this translates into praxis. Excellent teachers are aware of their own inner experiences and perform various kinds of inner work with these experiences in the service of developing their authenticity and abilities.

George Leonard (1969) writes about the need for education to foster and encourage experience and how “Education, at best, is ecstatic” (p. 16).