The Courageous Classroom. Jed Dearybury

Читать онлайн.
Название The Courageous Classroom
Автор произведения Jed Dearybury
Жанр Учебная литература
Серия
Издательство Учебная литература
Год выпуска 0
isbn 9781119700708



Скачать книгу

myth, the hero/heroine never accomplishes their tasks alone. They always have some sort of assistance from a guide and mentor. They are given tools and advice to overcome obstacles before them. When education works best, teachers are allowed to serve this role in the lives of students. Students feel free to come to them with hopes, dreams, and fears. Teachers must uncover both the gifts and wounds of their students, often while having to revisit past fears of their own.

      Kwame Scruggs, PhD

      Founder and Director

      Alchemy, Inc.

      There is no courage without fear.

      What is fear? Fear is an emotional experience in reaction to a situation perceived as threatening, unsafe, or dangerous. Although it is often perceived as negative, fear is a response that has evolved to help us both survive and reproduce as a species. When we experience fear, we have three kinds of responses: behavioral, physiological, and emotional. The behavioral response might be to attack (fight), run away (flight), or immobilize ourselves (freeze). Physiological responses include elevated heart rate, perspiration, or a trembly voice. The emotional response typically includes feelings of anger or sadness. Freezing can include hiding or “shutting down” emotionally. Most of us know how we feel and can recall a time when we were very afraid. Many of us have recurrent fears or specific phobias, or even what we still may be afraid of or have a phobia about but why? What happens to the brain and our body when we hear a sound, see something that frightens us, smell a noxious agent, or are touched by something unexpected?

      Our brain can be conditioned to automatically fear something: if we know a particular predator wants to make us his lunch, it is in our best interest not to waste valuable time and energy deciding whether we want to stick around and chat with him. However, in more nuanced circumstances – like our present-day world often presents – our brain can also update itself, leading to a concept known as fear safety. Thanks to research carried out in mice, scientists believe that we have a “courage switch” that can shift fear to courage: a mouse that would ordinarily freeze in response to a visual threat, can become bold, fiercely thumping its tail (Huberman 2018). A similar structure exists in humans.

      Fear might be evolutionarily adaptive, but so too is courage.

      Courage, the process of addressing your own fear to achieve a specific purpose, is not just something that can be learned, it is learning itself. Defined as “the act or experience of one that learns,” learning also means “the modification of a behavioral tendency by experience” (Merriam-Webster n.d.).

      Fear is a learned association between at least two things that are meant to be adaptive for us in an effort for minimizing exposure to danger. Rather than having to constantly expend energy to relearn what is dangerous or safe, we preserve fear memories and fear learning. However, our brain has the capacity for fear extinction and fear reversal, which allows us to gain cognitive control over our fears. In other words, your brain wants to keep you safe but not afraid. You can use emotional awareness and self-regulation to calm yourself and unlearn fear, using breathing techniques and having a courageous mindset.

      This book is a collaboration between two professionals with different experiences with and viewpoints on education. I (Dr. Janet) am not a teacher but a psychiatrist who usually sees kids who are not progressing in school and/or who have mental health issues impacting their ability to focus, learn information, or get along with their peers. As they grapple with underlying trauma, I am motivated by a desire to assist them as they face their own reality. My voice in this book is evidence-based, providing the neuroscience of fear and courage while sharing my own personal stories of finding my own courage. As the mother of four daughters, I respect teachers who, while raising their own families, skillfully and selflessly taught mine.