Learning to be Present: How Havruta Learning Can Activate Teachers' Relationships to Self, Other and Text

Author
Raider-Roth, M.
Lecturer

This article focuses on the ways hevruta learning can contribute to teachers' capacity to be present to self, other, subject matter and the cultural context in which the learning occurred. Hevruta learning, when conceptualized for the purposes of teachers' professional development, brings to the fore both the interpretive and relational aspects of the learning process. The theoretical frameworks of philosophical hermeneutics and relational psychology infuse our design of hevruta learning as well as our analysis of teachers' unfolding awareness of presence.

Drawing on qualitative data reflecting teachers' experiences in a week-long Summer Teachers Institute dedicated to text study and hevruta learning, this article describes the teachers' engagement with and exploration of each dimension of the relational triangle (i.e., teacher, student, and subject matter interactions; Hawkins, 200222. Hawkins , D. 2002 . " I, thou, and it " . In The informed vision: Essays on learning and human nature , Edited by: Hawkins , D. 48 - 62 . New York : Agathon Press .

View all references). Data suggests that there was an activation or intensity in these dimensions, which was the result of the consistent and constant demands to engage with specific hevruta learning practices. This study's findings suggest that hevruta learning can be a powerful form of professional development because the intensity of experience with the relational dimensions of the learning process allows teachers to assume a new stance. The nature of this experience invited teachers to develop their capacity to be present to self, fellow learners and the text, thereby offering them the opportunity to consider how they would bring back and translate these lessons to their own classroom worlds.

 

Raider-Roth, M. & Holzer, E. (2009)

Learning to be Present:: How Havruta Learning Can Activate Teachers' Relationships to Self, Other and Text. The Journal of Jewish Education 75(3), 216-239.

 

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Last Updated Date : 06/06/2017