Coping with Tensions: A Catalyst for Transformative Change for Teachers and Administrators
By (Author) Chelsea Faase
By (author) Sheila Kohl
By (author) Jason Lau
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
9th March 2022
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Teaching skills and techniques
371.10019
Hardback
150
Width 161mm, Height 227mm, Spine 18mm
413g
Education is a profession filled with tension. Pressures to help students achieve their potential come from all directions: political, parents, students, teachers, administrators, interpersonal, and intra-personal. The tensions experienced can result in two distinct paths. The first path may take teachers and administrators toward feelings of bewilderment, exhaustion, frustration, and ultimately burnout. The second path can result in rejuvenation. When on this path, tension can serve as a catalyst for change, improved communication, and improved student engagement and achievement. Coping with Tensions: A Catalyst for Transformative Change for Teachers and Administrators explores why some teachers, school leaders, and school organizations walk the path of bewilderment and disillusionment, while others choose the path of engagement.
Bringing together the stories of teachers and administrators, the authors of Coping with Tensions clearly articulate the external and internal forces that impact the work of educators as well as how to handle them quickly. The thought-provoking questions at the end of each chapter illuminate the care and dedication that the authors have in addressing the realities of those in education and the ways in which empowerment and liberation occurs. This book will transform any teacher or administrator that finds themselves in the traffic circle of the profession. -- Tynisha D. Willingham, interim provost and Chief Academic Officer, Mary Baldwin University, Staunton, Virginia
Conversation and communication are the most human things we do. Its the most humanizing thing we do and this book nails it. This text does not simply offer communication as a panacea. These wise and experienced educators offer research-based, transformative, and much needed conversational micro-skills to help every educator and administrator understand and apply the types of conflict-resolving communicative choices necessary for catalyzing the very change our schools, our kids and their futures, and thus our world, deserve. -- Carol Bruess, Professor Emeritus of Communication and Family Studies, University of St. Thomas, MN
Tension is inevitable and assails those in the education profession from every angle. In this book, Dr. Lau, Dr. Kohl, and Dr. Faase have crafted a perfect blend of captivating anecdotes, competing perspectives, practical strategies, and research on tensions in the educational workplace. The organizational structure and reader-friendly format will allow educators to ponder tensions faced, lessons learned, and the potential for joy in the process. -- Amy LaPierre, PhD, director of curriculum, School District of West De Pere, De Pere, Wisconsin
Teachers teach because they love to teach. But with the joy of teaching and changing lives comes a myriad of minefields that create tension. Using personal voices and narratives of educators, Coping With Tensions: A Catalyst for Transformative Change for Teachers and Administrators delves into the integrity of the field of education. Readers will dissect root causes of tensions in education, lay open our truths, share understandings, and increase ways for moving beyond the tensions and spend more time in the joy. -- Marguerite W. Penick, professor of Leadership, Literacy, and Social Foundations, College of Education and Human Services, University of Wisconsin Oshkosh, Oshkosh, Wisconsin
Chelsea Faase teaches in the leadership, literacy, and social foundations department at the University of Wisconsin Oshkosh. She has been in education for the last 14 years, having taught previously at both the elementary and middle school levels.
Sheila Kohl is currently a STEM teacher for grades 5 and 6. Previously she taught middle school science and was an adjunct professor.
Jason Lau has been a school administrator for 20 years. He has served as a Director of Special Education/Students Services, elementary principal, and a principal of a project-based charter school.