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Autor principal: Bogel, Gayle
Formato: Recurso educativo Open Access
Lenguaje:en
Publicado: 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ989071
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author Bogel, Gayle
author_facet Bogel, Gayle
Bogel, Gayle
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Cura Personalis: The School Library through an Ignatian Lens Bogel, Gayle Information Needs Lifelong Learning Educational Change School Libraries Educational Principles Library Services Theory of Mind Child Development Educational Philosophy Change Strategies Effective school libraries provide services that are based on meeting each individual's need for information. Information needs arise from both immediate and global communities--from the school building to the "flat world" of online connections. The strategy for successfully engaging individuals as lifelong learners begins with acknowledging the connections between mind, body, and spirit--and pursuing the ideal of educating each child from a holistic perspective. Historically, the focus of educating the whole child is found in the Jesuit tradition and Ignatian pedagogy. With its emphasis on personal connections to learning and reflection, the Ignatian approach of "cura personalis"--care of the whole person and care for each student in his or her uniqueness--resonates through progressive educational reform, inquiry learning, and the philosophical goals of school library professionals. The Ignatian vision of care for mind, body, and spirit is an effective, realistic perspective for approaching the potential of the school library. School librarians have the potential to offer a unique perspective of care within the school community. They are able to promote the affective connections that deep learning requires--the connections to self and connections to the larger world that result from careful consideration of the whole individual, the unique mind, body, and spirit of each child that is framed in the philosophy of "cura personalis." There is a direct connection from this holistic view to the overarching guiding principles of school libraries. The principles spring from a commitment to developing, understanding, and engaging lifelong learners and future citizens.
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ989071
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2012
record_format eric
spellingShingle Cura Personalis: The School Library through an Ignatian Lens
Bogel, Gayle
Information Needs
Lifelong Learning
Educational Change
School Libraries
Educational Principles
Library Services
Theory of Mind
Child Development
Educational Philosophy
Change Strategies
Cura Personalis: The School Library through an Ignatian Lens Bogel, Gayle Information Needs Lifelong Learning Educational Change School Libraries Educational Principles Library Services Theory of Mind Child Development Educational Philosophy Change Strategies Effective school libraries provide services that are based on meeting each individual's need for information. Information needs arise from both immediate and global communities--from the school building to the "flat world" of online connections. The strategy for successfully engaging individuals as lifelong learners begins with acknowledging the connections between mind, body, and spirit--and pursuing the ideal of educating each child from a holistic perspective. Historically, the focus of educating the whole child is found in the Jesuit tradition and Ignatian pedagogy. With its emphasis on personal connections to learning and reflection, the Ignatian approach of "cura personalis"--care of the whole person and care for each student in his or her uniqueness--resonates through progressive educational reform, inquiry learning, and the philosophical goals of school library professionals. The Ignatian vision of care for mind, body, and spirit is an effective, realistic perspective for approaching the potential of the school library. School librarians have the potential to offer a unique perspective of care within the school community. They are able to promote the affective connections that deep learning requires--the connections to self and connections to the larger world that result from careful consideration of the whole individual, the unique mind, body, and spirit of each child that is framed in the philosophy of "cura personalis." There is a direct connection from this holistic view to the overarching guiding principles of school libraries. The principles spring from a commitment to developing, understanding, and engaging lifelong learners and future citizens.
title Cura Personalis: The School Library through an Ignatian Lens
topic Information Needs
Lifelong Learning
Educational Change
School Libraries
Educational Principles
Library Services
Theory of Mind
Child Development
Educational Philosophy
Change Strategies
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ989071