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Why Boredom Matters

Contributor(s): Gary, Kevin Hood (Author)

ISBN: 9781108839983

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Hardcover
$100.00
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Pub Date: August 4, 2022

Dewey: 152.4

LCCN: 2022004113

Lexile Code: 0000

Features: Bibliography, Index, Price on Product

Target Age Group: NA to NA

Physical Info: 0.44" H x 8.50" L x 5.50" W ( 0.73 lbs) 158 pages

Descriptions, Reviews, etc.

Description: Boredom is an enduring problem. In response, schools often do one or both of the following: first, they endorse what novelist Walker Percy describes as a 'boredom avoidance scheme, ' adopting new initiative after new initiative in the hope that boredom can be outrun altogether, or second, they compel students to accept boring situations as an inevitable part of life. Both strategies avoid serious reflection on this universal and troubling state of mind. In this book, Gary argues that schools should educate students on how to engage with boredom productively. Rather than being conditioned to avoid or blame boredom on something or someone else, students need to be given tools for dealing with their boredom. These tools provide them with internal resources that equip them to find worthwhile activities and practices to transform boredom into a more productive state of mind. This book addresses the ways students might gain these skills.

Brief description: Kevin Hood Gary is a Professor of Education at Valparaiso University. His primary areas of interest include philosophy of education, ethics, and moral formation. He is co-founder of the North American Association for Philosophy of Education (https: //www.naape.org/), which provides a hospitable space for scholars working at the intersection of philosophy and educational thought. Kevin recently completed a four-year term as the Richard P. Baepler Distinguished Professorship in the Humanities at Valparaiso University. He is currently a Pedagogy Fellow with the Pedagogy of Christ & Being Human project, sponsored by the Yale Center for Faith and Culture.

Review Quotes: '... [this] important and insightful book challenges readers to consider the moral and practical dimensions of boredom so that we might educate for lives of meaning. He gathers a range of sources from across time, traditions, and disciplines, and he puts these in conversation with our everyday experiences of boredom in the modern world, while also exploring ways that boredom has been written about and experienced in the past. It is an excellent book.' Jeff Frank, Philosophical Inquiry in Education

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