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Cultivating Care, Wellbeing, and Reflection in Teacher Education: Stories That Teach [Pehme köide]

(Professor of Language and Literacy in the School of Education at Georgia Gwinnett College, USA.)
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 20 pages, kõrgus x laius: 229x152 mm, 12 Tables, black and white; 17 Halftones, black and white; 17 Illustrations, black and white
  • Ilmumisaeg: 05-Jun-2026
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1041244436
  • ISBN-13: 9781041244431
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  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 20 pages, kõrgus x laius: 229x152 mm, 12 Tables, black and white; 17 Halftones, black and white; 17 Illustrations, black and white
  • Ilmumisaeg: 05-Jun-2026
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1041244436
  • ISBN-13: 9781041244431
This book explores how storytelling can be used as a care-oriented, trauma-informed, and socially, culturally, and emotionally sustaining teaching tool in teacher education.

Storytelling is not simply a teaching strategy or writing technique, but a pedagogical framework and embodied methodology a way of thinking, learning, and being that supports questioning, reflection, and connection with students and preservice teachers. The book positions storytelling as a transformative literacy practice that integrates care, cognition, identity, and learning and is grounded in relational ethics and transnational feminist perspectives on voice, identity, and belonging.

Through storytelling, students and teachers engage not only in literacy practices but also in acts of care for self, for others, and for the larger world. Reading, writing, conversing, questioning, and analyzing become transformative practices that cultivate intellectual growth and emotional wellbeing by uniting body and mind, experience and imagination, memory and hope. The book examines narrative methodology, reflection, reader response, expressive writing, object narratives, visual storytelling, and role-play as pedagogical approaches that foster active participation, critical thinking, and meaningful collaboration. In this sense, storytelling is presented as an embodied literacy practice that supports meaning-making and professional judgment alongside academic development.

This is a valuable resource for teacher educators in literacy and language education, as well as preservice teachers seeking to develop reflective, relational, and care-oriented pedagogical practices.

Arvustused

"Kinga Varga-Dobai has given us a gift that feels like a soft and worn hand-stitched quilt passed down from a great-grandmother. Immersing readers in tender stories about her life and stories from her teacher education students that shake loose dominant stereotypes of education majors in the United States, Kinga moves the needle for literacy education to wellness and wholeness: the uniting of spirit, body, and mind. Readers will soften under Kingas storytelling methodology and make plans to incorporate her storytelling practices with their own teacher education students. They will also expand and sharpen their analytical tools, learning from Kinga's incisive feminist critiques of the frameworks available to make sense of power and oppression in the United States. Do yourself a favor - settle in with this book and begin to imagine the pedagogies necessary to live and heal in an uncertain and tumultuous world." - Stephanie Jones, The University of Georgia, Meigs Distinguished Professor, Mary Frances Early College of Education, USA

"Kinga Varga-Dobais Storytelling, Wellbeing, and Teacher Education names the gaps and meets the longings in my education as a teacher, professor. Centering storytelling as an embodied praxis that centers care within and as relation, she dismantles the stubborn, unrelenting, and often unconscious binaries that lodge themselves into educational structures aligned with power. Her insightful analyses and theorizing are accompanied by and interdependent with stories from her own sites of learning. In the Pause, her engaged storytelling breathes into what she offers, inviting a collective disentanglement from power and oriented toward educations potential for learning and liberation. Storytelling, Wellbeing, and Teacher Education is essential reading." - Kimberlee Pérez, Editor, Text & Performance Quarterly; Associate Professor of Performance Studies, University of Massachusetts Amherst, USA

"This book offers a rigorous and theoretically grounded examination of storytelling as an embodied methodology for advancing teacher wellbeing, intercultural competence, and reflective pedagogical practice. Drawing on feminist, narrative, and literacy scholarship, it demonstrates how narrative inquiry can disrupt reductive binaries, cultivate relational ways of knowing, and support humane, equityoriented teacher education. It constitutes a muchneeded contribution to contemporary debates in literacy education and teacher preparation at a time when the role of teachers is more important than ever. - Andrea Pet, Professor, Central European University, Vienna, Austria

This book is a deeply humanizing and intellectually rigorous contribution to literacy and teacher education. Through use of storytelling as a feminist poststructuralist methodology of care, Kinga Varga-Dobai bridges theory and practice to show how her pedagogy elicits complex emotions, identities, and relational knowing in her students and self. Her mosaic of beautifully crafted stories and theoretical provocations is an essential read for teacher educators, literacy scholars, and practitioners committed to crafting culturally sustaining teaching with an open heart."- Ruth Harman, The University of Georgia, Professor, TESOL and World Language Education, Mary Frances Early College of Education, USA

1.
Chapter Storytelling as a Methodology of Care: Theoretical
Foundations for Literacy and Wellbeing Pause: My Name
2. Whats in a Name
Revisited: Relationships, Reflections, and Becoming Teachers Pause: Sand
Ice-cream Memories
3. Practicing Wellness through Embodied Literacies Pause:
Love Is a Sight Word: A Found Poem
4. Reading as Response: Connecting
Literature to Lived Experience Pause: Anya
5. Grief Literacy: Writing as
Witness Pause: Pages
6. From Emotion to Need: Contemplative Writing and
Nonviolent Communication Pause: A Note from Prison
7. Objects of the Heart:
Telling Stories through Artifactual Literacy Pause: The Teacher the Mirror
8.
Acting Out: Exploring Performed Language and Problem-Solving through
Role-Play Pause: Language as River
9. Rivers of Language: Stories in an AI
World Pause: Found Poems in the Voice of Bilingual 7-year-old
10. Data and
Assessment as Storytelling: Multilingual Stories Pause: My Mother Tongue Has
an Accent
11. Beyond Binaries: Teaching with Intention Pause
12. Towards a
Pedagogy of Listening with Compassion Coda: Stories That Don't Translate
Kinga Varga-Dobai is Professor of Language and Literacy in the School of Education at Georgia Gwinnett College.