As this book makes clear, a Christian ethic of care serves to illuminate our relationship with God while also helping to flesh out what care looks like in various contexts, including and especially teaching and teacher education.
These are moments when someone, supernatural or mortal, talks to us directly or through circumstances and gives us insight. We need to pay attention to these moments that matter because they are profound and potentially life-altering.
... angry kid, and his friend, a much larger threat. The bullying from the smaller student ended in the middle of tenth ... nowhere to bully George McFly, you have an idea what my life was like in tenth grade. My bully purposely, and it ...
... Teacher Caring.” Academic Leadership Journal 7 (2009) 1–19. Goldstein, Lisa S. Reclaiming Caring in Teaching and Teacher Education. New York: Peter Lang, 2002. Goodenow, Carol. “Classroom Belonging among Early Adolescent Students ...
Written from the perspective of practical theology, the book is intended to help readers better understand the heart of God for us and the unlimited potential that exists when our moral will is aligned with His sovereign will.