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Preface by Jane Erricker and Clive Erricker.- 1. Introduction: Contemporary understandings and applications of spirituality: An introduction; Marian de Souza.- Section 1: Mysticism and Secularism.- 2. Christian spirituality and religious mysticism: Adjunct, parallel or embedded concepts?; Bernadette Flanagan.- 3. Spirituality and mysticism literature from Iran; Haleh Rafi.- 4. Contemporary sociological approaches to spirituality; Andrew Singleton.- 5. The spiritual care and nurture of the non-religious in the caring professions; Jacqueline Watson.- Section 2: Education.- 6. Spirituality and early childhood education: Play; Gill Goodliff.- 7. Adolescent spirituality and education; Karen-Marie Yust.- 8. Spirituality and education: A framework; Robert London.- 9. Spirituality in contemplative education; Aostre Johnson.- 10. A unity of peoples, spirits, and lands: Companions of indigenous and migrant education; Linita Manu'atu, Mere K¬_pa, Pepe, M. and Taione, M.I.- 11. Towards a holistic teacher education: Spirituality and special education teacher training; Kaili Zhang and Deirdra I-Hwey Wu.- Section 3: Health, Social Care and Wellbeing.- 12. Spirituality and cognitive neuroscience: A partnership for refining maps of the mind; B. Les Lancaster.- 13. Spirituality: Perspectives from psychology; Maureen Miner and Martin Dowson.- 14. Religion, spirituality and social work; Sheila Furness.- 15. Spirituality and practice across the fields of social work and family studies; Anthony James.- 16. Spirituality and occupational therapy: Reflections on professional practice and future possibilities; Mick Collins.- 17. Spirituality and midwifery; Jenny Hall.- 18. Spiritual screening in community-based palliative care by the multi-disciplinary team; Julie Fletcher.- Section 4: Business, Social and Cultural Studies.- 19. Environmental issues and spirituality: Tracing the past and making contemporary connections; Jane Bone.- 20. The states of spiritual communication (in part): Exploring the sharing of meaning; John L. Hochheimer, Timothy Huffman and Sharon Lauricella.- 21. Spirituality in management; Eleni Tzouramani and Fahri Karakas.- 22. Spirituality and the arts: Interwoven landscapes of identities and meaning; Marni Binder.- 23. Nurturing spirituality through picture books in children’s literature: A focus on the Upton’s Golliwogg stories; Olga Buttigieg.- 24. Taoism through Tai Chi Chuan: Physical culture as religious or holistic spirituality?; David Brown.- Section 4: Analysing the Voices and Concluding Thoughts.- 25. Understandings and applications of contemporary spirituality – Analysing the voices; Marian de Souza and Jacqueline Watson.
BIOGRAPHY MARIAN DE SOUZADr Marian de Souza is an Honorary Fellow
at Australian Catholic University and an Honorary Associate
Professor at Federation University, Australia. She has published
extensively about her research into the spirituality of young
people and the implications for education. Her approach recognizes
the complementarity of the cognitive, affective and spiritual
dimensions and the role of nonconscious learning. Marian also has
significant experience, nationally and internationally, in the
supervision and examination of doctoral students in the field of
spirituality in education and wellbeing.Marian is Chair,
International Association for children's spirituality and an
Honorary Academic Adviser to the Centre for Religion and Spiritual
Education, Institute of Education, Hong Kong. As well, she is a
member of the international editorial boards for several
international journals.Marian is available for consultancies in
schools and other educational organizations and for the supervision
of higher education research students. Her teaching and research
expertise are in the following areas:• Children and young people as
spiritual beings with corresponding implications for learning
across the curriculum;• Young people's spirituality and the
implications for the religious education curriculum;• Using the
arts to teach across the curriculum;• Interspiritual and
intercultural education for inclusivity, social cohesion and
wellbeing;• The transmission of the religious, spiritual and
cultural heritage amongst ethnic communities in contemporary
pluralistic societies
BIOGRAPHY JANE BONEDr Jane Bone is involved in research in the area
of early childhood education in Australia (and formerly in New
Zealand). Her expertise is in holistic and alternative approaches
to pedagogy and learning, including research involving Steiner,
Montessori andReggio Emilia based preschools. Her main research
area explores spirituality in early childhood settings.
Taking a contemporary theoretical approach her research
contributes to wider understandings about the significance of early
childhood education in terms of wellbeing and social justice. She
is currently exploring the connections of children with animals and
the environment. Her PhD supervision reflects these interests
and she is involved in a range of projects in Australia and
internationally about spiritual practices in everyday life,
holistic approaches to leadership, play and movement, the wellbeing
of young children and the challenges of diversity and spiritual and
religious belief in Australia and elsewhere.Jane is currently a
Senior Lecturer at Monash University, Victoria, Australia.
She is a member of the CRN (Collaborative Research Network),
a project with Queensland University of Technology, Charles Sturt
University and Monash.
BIOGRAPHY JACQUELINE WATSON
My key area of research is spirituality in education, including
connections between spirituality and religious education (RE), and
the inclusion of Humanism in Religious Education in the UK. Until
recently, I was a researcher and lecturer at the University of East
Anglia (UEA) and, from 2012-2014, I was Director of the Centre for
Spirituality and Religion in Education at UEA. My interest in
spirituality in education began over 20 years ago when I was
privileged to be taught by Jack Priestley and Terence Copley during
my PGCE at the University of Exeter. After teaching RE in Devon, I
studied part-time for an MEd and then a PhD at UEA while continuing
to teach in secondary schools. My research enabled me to explore
what spirituality meant in adults’ and young people’s lives, and to
examine understandings and definitions of spirituality in education
among teachers, educationalists and policy makers.I retired from
the University of East Anglia in 2014 and now live in Devon where I
continue my academic interests and have a new career as a as a
Humanist funeral and wedding celebrant with the British Humanist
Association. I am an Honorary University Fellow with the College of
Social Sciences and International Studies, University of Exeter,
and a Visiting Fellow with the School of Education and Lifelong
Learning, University of East Anglia. I am managing editor of
the International Journal of Children’s Spirituality. I am a
member of the Executive Committee of the International Association
for Children’s Spirituality and a member of the British Association
for the Study of Spirituality.
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