To generate opportunities for transformative learning, educators must
create learning environments that help students feel safe and
encourage them to grapple with potentially difficult material. The
trigger warning, a brief statement information students of potential
distressing or re-traumatizing content, has been offered as a way to
do just that, but this practice is neither as effective nor as
equitable as it may seem. Intentionally or indirectly, the trigger
warning limits the extent to which students are encouraged to engage
in transformative critical conversations and reinforces the culture of
silence that prevails in many educational spaces. Emerging as a
response to trauma amid an educational environment that professes
student-responsiveness and celebrates diversity yet perpetuates the
marginalization of many of the bodies in the classroom, the trigger
warning is not the problem – but it is not the solution either. What
does this mean for the faculty members teaching this new generation of
college students? And the teachers who find this generation’s
younger siblings in their high school classrooms? Drawing upon
original research, Mara Lee Grayson tracks the rise of the trigger
warning within historical and contemporary educational contexts;
explores its potentialities, limitations, and abuses as praxis; and
offers curricular suggestions for high school and college instructors
seeking to implement equitable, antiracist pedagogies that
simultaneously encourage students’ well-being, provoke intellectual
and emotional growth, and challenge the cultures of silence that
maintain inequity on school campuses.
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Recognizing and Challenging Classroom Cultures of Silence
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781475851625
Publisert
2020
Utgiver
Vendor
Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter