Contemplative Pedagogy & Higher Education
Arthur Zajonc began writing about the contemplative dimension of teaching, learning and knowing in 1996, as a response to the increasing abstraction of higher education. He has become a leading voice in the development of contemplative pedagogy, which calls for new methods that integrate subjective experience and incorporate the exploration of meaning, purpose and values in higher education.
- Contemplation in Education (January 2016)
- Contemplative Pedagogy in Higher Education: Toward a More Reflective Academy (January 2014)
- Contemplative Pedagogy: A Quiet Revolution in Higher Education (January 2013)
- Making Peace, Becoming Awake (April 2012)
- From Scientific Imagination to Ethical Insight (January 2010)
- Toward a Contemplative Curriculum (August 2009)
- Contemplative Pedagogy and the Sciences (January 2009)
- Knowledge between science and spirituality (May 2007)
- Contemplative and Transformative Pedagogy (November 2006)
- What He Can Teach Us About the Brain (September 2006)
- Science and Spirituality: Finding the Right Map (January 2006)
- Love and Knowledge: Recovering the Heart of Learning (January 2006)
- Spirituality in Higher Education: Overcoming the Divide (January 2003)
- Healing the Breach of Faith Toward Everything That Is (December 2002)
- Contemplative Inquiry and Action (April 2002)
- The Common Cognitive Sources of Science and Religion (June 1999)
- Understanding Hephaistos and Educational Technology (January 1997)
- The Vanishing Heart of Higher Education (February 1996)
- Science within an Ecology of Mind (January 1992)
- Guiding Our Children Into the Next Century (October 1991)
- Computer Pedagogy: Concerning the New Educational Technology (January 1984)
- Facts as Theory: Aspects of Goethe’s Science (December 1983)