Collaboration is widely celebrated as an ability schools should teach
children to practice. Yet collaboration has a darker side, as its use
to refer to those complicit with Nazi occupiers and with colonial
oppressors of many kinds suggests. In effect, “collaboration” is a
contranym, a word that can mean something or its opposite. To
collaborate can mean to work with one's friends and colleagues for the
common good. It can also mean to sell out one's friends and colleagues
for the sake of personal gain. What can schools do to encourage the
first and discourage the second? The loyalty and commitment to shared
ends that collaboration implies may seem a positive good only insofar
as those loyalties and ends are also good – but how to judge? This
book asks: to whom should one be loyal and what are the limits of
loyalty? What responsibility do collaborators bear for the outcomes of
their joint projects? Should I make those friends and those
responsibilities my own? These are questions children learn to answer
in schools, through the formal and informal education that happens
there. Amy Shuffelton explores those questions in the context of
children's lives in schools, including examples from films,
literature, and children's own accounts of moral dilemmas they face
around questions of friendship, authority, and their own developing
agency. She argues that rather than collaboration being a simple, good
practice, considerable care is needed to ensure it serves individuals
and their communities well.
Les mer
Philosophy of Education in Practice
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781350302754
Publisert
2023
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Bloomsbury UK
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter