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Psychiatrist and 91亚色 PhD candidate creating pedagogy to help students articulate emotions during learning

students in a classroom

For an idea of the innovative activities underway in the Faculty of Education at 91亚色, consider Dr. Sheila Harms. A child and adolescent psychiatrist at McMaster Children鈥檚 Hospital, Harms is pursuing her PhD at 91亚色 and is looking to bring a new perspective to the field of psychiatry and education.

Dr. Sheila Harms

Harms explains her new approach as getting away from didactic lectures. She takes into account principles from adult learning of the kind that might occur in a police force. Under this approach, students create their own curriculum throughout the school year based on the real-world cases they encounter. Harms notes this approach is a direct reflection of the thinking and research she is doing at 91亚色.

Having been interested in education throughout her career, Harms describes her dawning realization that there is always more to learn. Pursuing an education degree has helped her think in a more generative way about what occurs in a classroom.

鈥淏y classroom, I mean my practice as a child psychiatrist and the work I do with my patients,鈥 Harms said. 鈥淚t feels like I am thinking in a different way now.鈥

Harms was drawn to 91亚色 by the work of Deborah Britzman, Distinguished Research Professor and 91亚色 Research Chair in Pedagogy and Psycho-Social Transformation.

鈥淪he has a novel approach in which she applies the valences of psychoanalysis to education,鈥 Harms said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a standalone in a world that clashes between empiricism and emotion.鈥

Currently, Harms is writing her dissertation proposal in which she lays out the case for a pedagogical approach of uncertainty as opposed to a focus on overly rigid expert culture. She is a proponent of a pedagogy that sees failure as an opportunity for growth instead of something to be avoided in a culture typically obsessed with getting the right answer.

鈥淗umility is the value that underpins the kind of learning I am hoping to create,鈥 she said.

One challenge facing this rigid culture is that educators tend to make no space for their students鈥 emotions in classrooms, she says. Students are often not equipped to articulate their experiences and resulting emotions; however, the emotional logic that drives much of our lives is almost palpable in most learning exchanges.

鈥淟earning is an emotional experience, but we don鈥檛 know how to talk about it. I鈥檓 trying to develop language that allows for people to grapple with occurrences that might not feel comfortable but is affecting their learning experience.鈥

She recalls a student emailing her to say they were intimidated by her (Harms鈥) high expectations and were uncertain if they would succeed.

鈥淭here was discomfort but also growth that came from the discomfort,鈥 Harms said, adding that the student concluded their email with confidence, stating they now saw themselves as a leader.

In her psychiatry practice, Harms often encounters youth and adolescents who were traumatized by their educators as a result of being misunderstood

鈥淪uch emotional experiences in the classroom cannot be avoided,鈥 Harms said. "Education has to make room for people鈥檚 feelings and unfiltered thoughts as opposed to limiting what they can imagine.鈥

Harms urges educators to tread carefully when it comes to their students鈥 emotions.

鈥淜ids are coming in with histories of trauma and teachers have to be mindful of that,鈥 she said.

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