From Library Journal
With a series of recent occurrences of violence in schools across the nation, this important book on teaching spirituality in American schools may serve as a significant resource for school teachers and administrators who want to help their students cultivate a sense of spirituality. Lantieri, founding director of the Resolving Conflict Creatively Program of Educators for Social Responsibility and co-author of Waging Peace in Our Schools, advocates that teachers should nurture a sense of spiritual meaning in students, but also carefully emphasizes that spirituality is not synonymous with religion. In this collection of scholarly essays, 12 respected educators join Lantieri in her quest to discover how educators can nurture the inner lives of their students without violating the beliefs of their families or their distinct faiths. Among these educators are Rachel Kessler, who writes on seven "gateways" to nurturing inner lives, and Geoffrey Canada, who discusses the rewards of practicing and teaching tai chi. Teachers who struggle to achieve this difficult equilibrium will welcome the wealth of practical advice that these essays have to offer. So too will high school libraries and academic libraries with strong collections on education. Samuel T. Huang, Univ. of Arizona, Tucson
Copyright 2001 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
Editor Lantieri and other educators discuss bridge building between the spiritual and the secular within the restrictions imposed on public education by the mandated separation of church and state. Without such a bridge, teachers miss "teachable moments" in which to reach the inner lives of children, who naturally ask about such spiritual issues as, when a relative has died, the afterlife and such ethical issues as how they are treated. Public policy, however, holds that "nurturing the inner life [is] not the business of public education." The contributors, who teach students from a range of ethnic, racial, and economic backgrounds, advise how to work around restrictions--not to advocate particular religious teachings but to use teachers' and students' "spiritual intelligence." They suggest exercises for integrating ethical issues, spirituality, and academics, such as discussing with students the purpose of life, experiences of solitude, and handling life transitions. The book consistently encourages teachers to be courageous and deeply engaged in teaching students, bringing their entire selves, including their spirituality, to their teaching.
Vanessa BushCopyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.