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'Teaching and Learning in Micronesia'

UOG publishes book for educators by educators

University of Guam President Dr. Anita Borja Enriquez, first from left, holds a copy of the book “Teaching & Learning in Micronesia: Reflections on Island Centered Pedagogy.” President Enriquez is joined by Dr. Kirk Johnson, center, UOG professor of sociology who facilitated the book project, and Interim Senior Vice President and Provost Dr. Sharleen Santos-Bamba. Photo courtesy University of Guam

By Pacific Island Times News Staff


What do you get when you collect the thoughts of dozens of new and seasoned teachers whose experiences range from middle school to high school and university classroom settings?

Nearly two years in the making, the collective effort has produced the 310-page book, titled “Teaching & Learning in Micronesia: Reflections on Island-Centered Pedagogy.”

A product of the University of Guam, it offers a collection of essays by teachers about their vast and rich classroom experiences, offering uniquely Guam and Micronesian perspectives and interactions between students and teachers. “Written by educators for educators, these reflections on island-centered pedagogy offer insights into the cultural diversity among our student populations and their perspectives,” said Anita Borja Enriquez, UOG president.


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“The more we share the uniqueness of island wisdom and our diverse cultures, the more educators are equipped with knowledge and cultural competency to support our students.”

The book is available for free starting this week and will be distributed through UOG’s network of teachers across the island.

Copies were also gifted on Aug, 24, to future teachers attending classes at the UOG School of Education.


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Dr. Kirk Johnson, UOG professor of sociology, facilitated the book project with funding from the National Endowment for the Humanities.

The book is the outcome of a series of seminars held in 2022 with some 60 educators in Guam who gathered to reflect and learn with each other about how their classrooms could truly be transformative spaces where students from diverse backgrounds take ownership of their own learning. A grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities helped to facilitate the seminars with the overarching title: “Towards More Perfect Union: Teaching and Learning in Micronesia.”

“When teachers share their diverse insights within the context of the Micronesia setting, it becomes a convergence of experiences from both new and veteran educators that has contributed toward a very rich published volume that we hope will inspire many others here in Guam and throughout the region,” said Johnson.

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The project drew inspiration, in part, from the island concept of setting sail on a canoe.

“During this voyage, we came to discover certain foundational concepts that we feel are important and can act as a rudder and guide for our canoe. As teachers in Micronesia, we appreciate the importance of embracing a humble posture of learning in all that we do,” according to Johnson.


 
To learn more about how to get a copy of the book, contact: 
Dr. Kirk Johnson, Professor of Sociology 
College of Liberal Arts & Social Sciences 
kjohnson@triton.uog.edu  
 

The educators also produced a set of ideals to strive for.

“Faith in the capacity of every student will prove essential if we are to elicit from them wholehearted participation in the learning process,” Johnson wrote in the book’s introduction.

In the book’s foreword, Interim Senior Vice President and Provost Sharleen Santos-Bamba described the topics and essays as inspirational.

“Explore this text. Soak in the narratives. Share the stories. Advocate for change. Live and be kind,” Santos-Bamba wrote.


Dr. Clare Ann Camacho, a UOG consultant and retired UOG faculty, who co-wrote the grant with Dr. Johnson, said the book can provide guidance for teachers to reflect on how to provoke thinking and learning in their classrooms. (UOG)




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