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Journal Keeping: How to Use Reflective Writing for Learning, Teaching, Professional Insight and Positive Change by Dannelle D. Stevens — book cover

Journal Keeping: How to Use Reflective Writing for Learning, Teaching, Professional Insight and Positive Change

by Dannelle D. Stevens, Joanne E. Cooper
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Overview

** By the authors of the acclaimed Introduction to Rubrics
** Major growth of interest in keeping journals or diaries for personal reflection and growth; and as a teaching tool
** Will appeal to college faculty, administrators and teachers

One of the most powerful ways to learn, reflect and make sense of our lives is through journal keeping.

This book presents the potential uses and benefits of journals for personal and professional development—particularly for those in academic life; and demonstrates journals’ potential to foster college students’ learning, fluency and voice, and creative thinking.

In professional life, a journal helps to organize, prioritize and address the many expectations of a faculty member’s or administrator’s roles. Journals are effective for developing time management skills, building problem-solving skills, fostering insight, and decreasing stress.

Both writing and rereading journal entries allow the journal keeper to document thinking; to track changes and review observations; and to examine assumptions and so gain fresh perspectives and insights over past events.

The authors present the background to help readers make an informed decision about the value of journals and to determine whether journals will fit appropriately with their teaching objectives or help manage their personal and professional lives. They offer insights and advice on selecting the format or formats and techniques most appropriate for the reader’s purposes.

Synopsis

** By the authors of the acclaimed Introduction to Rubrics
** Major growth of interest in keeping journals or diaries for personal reflection and growth; and as a teaching tool
** Will appeal to college faculty, administrators and teachers

One of the most powerful ways to learn, reflect and make sense of our lives is through journal keeping.

This book presents the potential uses and benefits of journals for personal and professional development—particularly for those in academic life; and demonstrates journals’ potential to foster college students’ learning, fluency and voice, and creative thinking.

In professional life, a journal helps to organize, prioritize and address the many expectations of a faculty member’s or administrator’s roles. Journals are effective for developing time management skills, building problem-solving skills, fostering insight, and decreasing stress.

Both writing and rereading journal entries allow the journal keeper to document thinking; to track changes and review observations; and to examine assumptions and so gain fresh perspectives and insights over past events.

The authors present the background to help readers make an informed decision about the value of journals and to determine whether journals will fit appropriately with their teaching objectives or help manage their personal and professional lives. They offer insights and advice on selecting the format or formats and techniques most appropriate for the reader’s purposes.

About the Author, Dannelle D. Stevens

Dannelle D. Stevens is Professor, Department of Curriculum and Instruction, Portland State University, and the co-author of Introduction to Rubrics. She and Joanne E. Cooper have been teaching journal keeping together for ten years and have published scholarly articles, book chapters and conference papers on this topic.

Joanne E. Cooper is a Professor in the Department of Educational Administration, University of Hawaii at Manoa.

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Editorials

From the Publisher

"As mentioned, this book has lots in it about journaling. If you are new to the idea and want an excellent introduction, the material is here... I could see having this book on the shelf of an EDC or in a library, as it is bound to benefit people interested in learning more about journals and/or addressing specific issues pertinent to the broad area at a pedagogical level... In summary, I comment the book on the whole as one that belongs in a resource center to support teaching and learning."

"Journal Keeping makes a clear and compellig argument for what the authors call an "underused and sometimes misunderstood" (xv) educational tool... The book makes a theoretically sound, logistically solid, and ultimately persuasive argument for the keeping of journals."

"Dannelle Stevens and Joanne Cooper bring years of personal and professional experience with journal writing to inform the content of their book. This fact creates a level of credibility to their writing, and their approach to the material makes reading the text feel like a converstation with trusted friends. The intent of their volume is to explain the use of journaling in teaching and how to keep a journal to help organize professional lives. Therefore, this book should appeal to a variety of academic readers including faculty members, students, staff and administrators. In addition, both the novice and seasoned journal writer should find several takeaways... Among the several strengths of the book is the potential for immediate application of journal writing strategies to support active learning... Journal Keeping should be on everyone's short list. The writing is approachable, the book well organized and the material easy to implement in practice. Rarely have I found a book that I have been so enthusiastic about and that I highly recomment to others."

"Dannelle Stevens and Joanne Cooper have written a comprehensive yet accessible book on the pleasures and challenges of using journals to support reflective learning... This is the book I wish that I'd had years ago when I first started experimenting with journals in my classes. I commend it highly, and believe it has the potential to bring journaling into more widespread and effective practice in reflective learning."

"This work presents background on the value of journals so that readers can determine whether journals will fit appropriately with their teaching objectives or help them manage their personal and professional lives... A collection of 19 case studies of journals by faculty, graduate students, and administrators is illustrated with b&w photos, illustrations, and pages from real-life handwritten journals."

"Making a written record of our lives, experiences, and thoughts often helps us to understand them better, provide an emotional relief, memorialize accomplishments, benefi our posterity, and estbalish the only kind of immortality that most of us can hope for. That's why Journal Keeping is such an invaluable and highly recommended instructional manual for aspiring diarists and journalists... It is a highly recommended addition to personal, professional, academic, and community library reference collections and supplemental reading lists."

“Over the course of human history, when we study individuals who have made a significant difference in our lives, we discover that the key to their own self-discovery, growth, and resilience is their journal keeping. We call them ‘geniuses,’ whether Aristotle, Leonardo da Vinci, Wordsworth (Dorothy as well as William), John Muir, Einstein, Gertrude Stein, Thoreau, Ansel Adams, Thomas Jefferson, Abraham Lincoln, or Barack Obama. Presidents, scientists, artists, all came to their purpose and power through the reflective practice of writing a journal. Read this book for real-life lessons on the power of journals for your own professional and creative life. You will be inspired to write and I promise you, whatever you write, in whatever format, will transform your moment, make your day, and change – who knows, perhaps save – your life.”

"Journal Keeping is a superb tool for educators who want to be reflective practitioners, and help their students become reflective learners. But it is not a typical 'how-to' text, as the epigraph to Chapter 1 suggests: 'The unexamined life is not worth living.' Elaborating on Socrates, Stevens and Cooper explore the rationale, process and impact of journal keeping on educators and students alike, helping us overcome familiar obstacles; e.g., 'How can you possibly evaluate a student journal?' As one who likes to amend Socrates with the words, 'If you choose to live an unexamined life, please do not take a job that involves other people,' I hope this fine book will be widely read and used."

“This book describes a practical strategy for promoting learning and thinking artfully grounded in adult development and learning theory. Stevens and Cooper remind readers that reflection is a key element of learning and offer multiple ways to reflect meaningfully through journaling. They use their own and others’ journal entries to reveal how journaling helps reflect on one’s experience, develop one’s internal voice through making meaning of experience, transform one’s assumptions and knowledge, and organize and communicate one’s perspective. They offer multiple possibilities for readers to use journaling for personal growth, fostering their own and others’ learning, and managing professional life.”

“An impressively complete and well organized exploration of the uses of journal writing. It provides rich backing for John Dewey’s key insight, namely that it’s not experience that makes us learn, it’s reflection on experience."

Book Details

Published
April 1, 2009
Publisher
Stylus Publishing
Pages
286
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9781579222161

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