Teaching through the tensions: dwelling in multiple accountabilities and responsibilities as a scholar-activist educator
Abstract
This portfolio explores the experiences of a twenty-first century educator (myself) in my
role as a white settler educator working in a unique high school education model, in a diverse
urban context in Winnipeg, Manitoba, facing interlocking oppressive forces of capitalism,
colonialism, resource extraction, neoliberalism, and social inequities that make up the global
crisis of modernity. Through autoethnographic poetic inquiry, I examine how I embody my
accountabilities and responsibilities to/within my school context, and dwell in tensions between
conflicting accountabilities and responsibilities, as I simultaneously work within institutions that
perpetuate ongoing harms and injustices, and strive for anti-oppressive, culturally sustaining, and
ecologically resilient education. The chapters included in the portfolio are: (1) an introduction,
(2) a description of the research paradigm (based in relationality/relational accountability) and
methodology (autoethnographic poetic inquiry), (3) a literature review documenting the multiple
accountabilities and responsibilities that exist for teachers concerned with activism, climate
justice, and liberation in the midst of multiple global crises that threaten the well-being of people
and the planet, (4) a collection of original poems that document my lived experiences of dwelling
within the tensions, (5) a thematic analysis of the poems that critically reflects on commitments
and next steps, and (6) a conclusion. Through the thematic analysis, I found that naming tensions
such as whiteness, relationship to time and power, harm and violence can open spaces for deeper
engagement, and that commitment to meaningful practices is a critical way to train intuition and
instinct, allowing for an embodied praxis of connecting with the world, others, and myself as a
scholar-activist educator.