Public Group active 1 month, 1 week ago

Contemplative and Transformative Pedagogy

This CUNY Commons Group is dedicated to continuing and expanding the conversation on Contemplative and Transformative Education begun by the CUNY Contemplatives Network. Members of the CUNY Contemplatives Network come from a wide variety of disciplines throughout the University. For many years, we have been teaching with secular contemplative practices, organizing conferences and presentations, publishing, and meeting regularly throughout CUNY.

What are Contemplative Practices?
from The Center for Contemplative Mind in Society (http://www.contemplativemind.org/):
Contemplative practices quiet the mind in order to cultivate a personal capacity for deep concentration and insight. Examples of contemplative practice include not only sitting in silence but also many forms of single-minded concentration including meditation, contemplative prayer, mindful walking, focused experiences in nature, yoga and other contemporary physical or artistic practices. We also consider various kinds of ritual and ceremony designed to create sacred space and increase insight and awareness to be forms of contemplative practice.

The tree of contemplative practices: http://www.contemplativemind.org/practices/tree.html

This is a link to “Contemplative and Transformative Pedagogy” by Arthur Zajonc, professor of physics at Amherst College: http://www.fetzer.org/images/stories/pdf/contemplative_pedagogy.pdf

The CUNY Contemplatives Network (http://cunycontemplatives.pbworks.com/w/page/8185079/FrontPage)
The Association for Contemplative Mind in Higher Education (http://www.acmhe.org)

Admins:

Announcement by Rick Repetti on 9/2/11

  • The CUNY Mindfulness Lecture Series
    Date: Second Thursdays, Fall 2011
    Time: 6:30 – 7:30 PM
    Address: The Graduate Center, CUNY
    365 Fifth Avenue, Thesis Room 4441
    New York, NY 10016
    (212) 817-7000

    Description: The CUNY Mindfulness Lecture Series will bring together scientists, scholars and students to present and discuss cross-disciplinary research and theory relative to the science and practice of mindfulness. Mindfulness will be explored through the fields of physics, neuroscience, philosophy and psychology. This series will offer CUNY students and the community opportunities to participate in the advancement of learning in this field.

    Lectures will be presented at the Graduate Center on the second Thursday of each month at 6:30pm during the Fall semester of 2011. The dates and lecture titles are planned as follow:

    1. Techniques and Benefits of Mindful Practice (Jonathan Kaplan, Ph.D)
    September 08, 2011

    2. Changes in Brain Structure and Function with Mindful Practice (Zoran Josipovic, Ph.D, NYU)
    October 13, 2011

    3. The Origins and Philosophy of Mindfulness (Lama Migmar Tseten, Harvard University)
    November 10, 2011

    4. Meditation and the Focused Mind in Academia (David Forbes, Ph.D, Brooklyn College/CUNY)
    December 08, 2011

    Please join us to work with students and scholars to explore the emerging science of mindful practice.

    For more information contact:

    Stephen Redenti, Ph.D. David Forbes, Ph.D.
    Assistant Professor Associate Professor
    Biology and Biochemistry School Counseling Program
    Lehman College/CUNY Brooklyn College/CUNY
    stephen.redenti@lehman.cuny.edu dforbes@brooklyn.cuny.edu
    718-960-2236 718-951-5938

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