Document Type

Article

Publication Date

2015

Abstract

Drawing on interviews with writing teachers, this article highlights some of the affective responses that may arise for students, community partners, and teachers when we situate our pedagogies in public sites beyond the classroom. I analyze a teacher-narrated moment of student distress to demonstrate how theories of transformative learning might help us productively theorize affect in service-learning and community-based education. To conclude, I offer a reciprocal model of care that employs tenets of feminist pedagogy, such as transparency and decentering of authority, and that acknowledges the valid emotions students, teachers, and community members may experience. I call for community literacy practitioners to see the power of all participants to both give and receive care in transformative education.

Comments

Originally published in:

Holmes, Ashley J. “Transformative Learning, Affect, and Reciprocal Care in Community Engagement.” Community Literacy Journal. 9.2 (Spring 2015): 48-67. DOI: 10.1353/clj.2015.0001

Copyright © 2015 Community Literacy Journal. Posted with the permission of the publisher.

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