Acknowledgments
About the Authors
Preface
Introduction
1. What Is Emotional Intelligence and Why Is It Important in the
Classroom?
2. The Inner Journey: Knowing Ourselves as Teachers
3. Continuing the Journey: Perceptions, Expectations and
Attributions
4. Taming the Beast – Teacher Self-Regulation
5. What Makes Us Tick – Teacher Motivation
6. Peripheral Visions: Teacher Social Awareness
7. Orchestrating Our Relationships: Creating a Supportive Learning
Environment
8. Bringing It All Together: Teachers as Emotion Coaches
References
Index
William Powell has served as an international school educator for the past 30 years in the United States, Saudi Arabia, Tanzania, Indonesia, and Malaysia. From 1991 to 1999, he served as the chief executive officer of the International School of Tanganyika in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, and from 2000 to 2006, he served as headmaster of the International School of Kuala Lumpur. He is the coauthor, with his wife Ochan, of Count Me In! Developing Inclusive International Schools (2000) and Making the Difference: Differentiation in International Schools (2007), Becoming an Emotionally Intelligent Teacher (2010) and How to teach now: Five Keys to Personalized Learning in the Global Classroom (2011). Bill′s most recent book is entitled The OIQ Factor: How teachers can raise the Organizational Intelligence of Schools (2013). Bill and Ochan are currently working on a project, The Next Frontier: Inclusion to support the inclusion of special needs children in international schools. They are focusing their attention on teacher professional development, school leadership and governance training and serve as consultants for Education Across Frontiers. When he is not facilitating teacher workshops or speaking at conferences, Bill can be found in the French Pyrenees where he fights (together with a handful of sheep) an annual battle with the European bramble. Ochan Kusuma-Powell is cofounder and director of Education Across Frontiers, an organization that promotes teacher education toward the development of professional learning communities. A graduate of Columbia University with a doctorate in international education development, she has more than 30 years experience in international education. Kusuma-Powell has developed and implemented inclusive special education programs in the United States, Indonesia, Malaysia, and Tanzania. She has been an outspoken advocate for children with special needs globally. Together with her husband Bill, she coauthored an OSAC publication entitled Count Me In! Developing Inclusive International Schools and Making the Difference: Differentiation in International Schools. Kusuma-Powell is also the author of Parent Advocacy in International School. She is a trainer for the Teachers Training Center and an adjunct faculty member at Lehigh University and the State University of New York at Buffalo.
"I found myself saying ′Amen!′ continuously as point after point
was right on target with my experience and perspective. The authors
present and thoroughly discuss such vital teacher attributes as
empathy, humor, relationships, reflection, self-discovery,
self-awareness, and motivation. This book would be an excellent
focus for a faculty on professional development days."
*Brinton W. Woodward, Jr., Director*
"Bill and Ochan Powell start from the double premise that teachers
with strong emotional intelligence are able to help students learn
in a more effective and efficient manner, and, perhaps more
important, that emotional intelligence is not simply something that
one is born with, but rather something that can be developed. The
Powells take us on a wonderful journey that combines the theory of
emotional intelligence with illustrations and vignettes that make
the theory readily understandable in the context of the school and
the classroom. This is all tied together with practical activities
and exercises that teachers and professional development
specialists can use to enhance the emotional intelligence of
teachers."
*Vincent L. Ferrandino, Former Executive Director*
"Bill and Ochan Powell’s book goes some considerable way to
explaining the ′you’ve either got it or you haven’t’ part of
teaching, and will help teachers and school leaders identify why
some teachers struggle to be effective in the classroom and, most
important, how they can help themselves and be helped. It explains
how and why relationships are at the core of what it means to be an
adult and what it means to be a teacher, and how all teachers can
develop stronger, more positive relationships that will result in
better learning for students."
*Judith Fabian, Chief Academic Officer*
"The authors bring together the importance and impact of the
teacher’s emotional intelligence upon the learner. This book
provides clarity to the complex connectivity between emotions and
cognition. With great care and sensitivity, Powell and
Kusuma-Powell describe and outline the coordinated effort needed by
school personnel to provide a series of activities and exercises
for teachers in the area of emotional intelligences. A must-read
for school administrators and teachers."
*Daphne Pappas Hobson, Director of International Programs*
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