Empathy Capacity-Building through a Community of Practice Approach: Exploring Perceived Impacts and Implications
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Empathy and Conservation
1.2. Developing Educators’ Capacity for Fostering Empathy in Children
1.3. Community of Practice Approach
1.4. Project Context and Evaluation Purpose
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. REM Step One: Identifying the Intervention
2.2. REM Step Two: Inviting Participants and Pre-Appreciative Inquiry Reflection
A child has arrived this morning with a lot of energy, not necessarily positive energy from the weekend. She is using a stick to knock on the trunks of one of the jack pine trees, and looking at me, knowing that this is breaking one of our agreements to take care of the plants. I wait and pause for a moment giving her time to decide to stop the activity, but she continues. I walk towards her, put my hand on the Jack Pine tree, and talk to the tree. “I’m sorry this is hurting you. We promise to look after you”. I give the tree a hug, she puts down the stick. She gives the tree a hug too, and then I gently guide her with my hand on her back to play in a new area. She joins in hide and seek in a positive way. I can tell that this child is coming to school with experiences that were challenging over the weekend. I need to meet her where she is at. She is not in a place to hold a lot of communication right now, so gentle modeling and soft attention help her find her way and grow her empathy. This is a time where it would be an initial reaction to reprimand, but modeling is much more powerful for growing a relationship with the child, empathy, and relationship with the land.
A little girl was playing under a large pine tree and heard a couple of chickadees talking back and forth. She jumped up and said, “Teacher, I can hear them singing to me!” She then proceeded to sing back and forth with the chickadees for a good 7 min or so. Another little girl heard the chickadees talking and joined in their extensive conversation before they flew across the field. She later told me she was talking to her chickadee friends she feeds in the playscape. She asked if we could make more bird feeders because she thinks they are out of food and had come to tell us. She made the connection with her surroundings and the animals in her environment and how to care for them.
K, P, and E were climbing up a steep part along the trail where there is erosion netting. I shared that I noticed the netting was there to help protect the land. One of them wondered, “What do you mean protect the land?” I responded that the soil could wash away from the hillside and down into one of our play spaces and beyond to the creek. I wondered how we could help protect the land. Two boys realized they could jump past the netting to the trail and back to help keep the land in place. The third boy chose an entirely new route to get to the play spot and took that route each time. Thirty feet away another child overheard the conversation and grabbed a child to stop her from climbing up the netting. It may not have been the best way to help a friend make a kind choice, but her intentions showed her understanding and empathy for the land. I thanked the children for caring for the earth aloud. The behavior of that girl standing at a distance helps expand my understanding of empathy. She knew it was important to help the land in that moment, and she may not have been sure what to do, so she did what she could. It makes me reflect on times when I or others want to help and may not know what to do. In these times our empathy may not manifest as what one would expect empathy to look like (such as grabbing a person in this case), but that doesn’t mean the empathy isn’t there.
2.3. REM Step Three: Conducting Appreciative Inquiry Interviews and Group Reflection
2.4. REM Step Four: Radiant Thinking and Mapping the Ripples
2.5. REM Step Five: Coding, Cleaning, and Refining the Ripple Effect Map
3. Results
3.1. Framing and Context
3.2. Impacts of the Empathy CoP
Indigenous peoples skillfully, diligently, and systematically observe, experience, reflect, and learn to create highly sophisticated ways of being-knowing-doing based on nature’s laws. Indigenous peoples recognize and value the wisdom of nature and thus organize themselves in ways that reflect and model nature [63] (p. 394).
4. Discussion
4.1. Limitations
4.2. Impact of CoP Participation
4.3. CoP Effectiveness as a Capacity-Building Strategy
It’s just enlivened every part of my teaching practice. And like so many of you are sharing, the CoP prompted the internalizing of what I was learning and the changes in my teaching. This CoP has shifted my frameworks, in my teaching practice, for sure, but even in my relationships with my family, and with my friends, and with my relationship with nature, and my understanding of the non-human relatives that I’m with every day.
We are coming to understand that learning rather than being solely individual as we have taken it to be is actually also social … People learn from and with others … They learn through practice (learning as doing), through meaning (learning as intentional), through community (learning as participating with others), and through identity (learning as changing who we are) [65] (p. 227).
I think something that really can’t be emphasized enough is how much we as a teaching community are benefiting from this empathy Community of Practice. We have so many teaching communities that we are a part of as early childhood educators. There are so many demands on our time and so many trainings that we’re supposed to do. And it is not often—or maybe never—that we have something this grounding, this uplifting, and this centering … really transformative just even in how we see ourselves.
It is through connection that this work and this way of being gets strengthened and is long-lasting. Without others, the fire would fizzle. We need to grow in this work together, and we are doing this work together. It feels good to share in the responsibility (because it is a big one).
Because it was a monthly and ongoing experience instead of a one-time thing, I was able to experience, be inspired, motivated and committed in a way that I would not have, had I been a passive participant. Being invited to be an active member of a community, I had more care and connection with the work I was doing and the framework I was learning.
The energy that I get from being in community here and gaining insights and perspectives has invigorated my teaching practice. Empathy work can be draining. This practice of coming back together in community helps my waned empathy renew! Each time I leave I feel excited to practice and implement my learning. I feel so connected to this work, and also connected to my intuition and so validated in that.
4.4. Programmatic Implications
This is why building these skills as a habit in community will transfer to a natural way of being outside of this community. The value is too great and the children are too important, therefore, that will keep this ongoing desire to foster empathy in our daily interactions with them.
4.5. Research Implications
4.6. Use of REM for Evaluating Professional Learning in the Context of Empathy Capacity-Building
REM helped in my reflection and application of the empathy strategies. It was valuable to recount stories to see how the strategies impacted outcomes within the group and individuals. I liked circling back through the ripples in community to deepen understandings and learning. It offered meaningful support to see the strategies in action. It is exciting to consider their impact in the future.
REM provided time to reflect, to see and understand that empathy is all around me, every day. This process helped me intentionally focus on the positive outcomes of empathy. It helped me to know that the work, time, and effort put forth in nurturing empathy in our community is worth it. That adds so much momentum to my efforts.
REM provided an opportunity for re-connecting. It was so good to learn and feel deeply validated and connected to the others in the CoP. It really helped my well of empathy fill up each time we came together for REM and shared our work and story.
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
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How Are Teachers Impacted by CoP Participation? What Are Teachers Doing Differently? | How Are Changes in Teachers’ Empathy Practices Affecting Others? Who Is Benefitting from Teachers’ Participation? | What Changes Are We Seeing (or Anticipating) in the Contexts That Surround Us? |
---|---|---|
Teachers Being (Affective)
Deepened understanding of:
| Children Being (Affective)
Being (Affective)
| Program Being (Affective)
|
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Ernst, J.; Underwood, C.; Wojciehowski, M.; Nayquonabe, T. Empathy Capacity-Building through a Community of Practice Approach: Exploring Perceived Impacts and Implications. J. Zool. Bot. Gard. 2024, 5, 395-415. https://doi.org/10.3390/jzbg5030027
Ernst J, Underwood C, Wojciehowski M, Nayquonabe T. Empathy Capacity-Building through a Community of Practice Approach: Exploring Perceived Impacts and Implications. Journal of Zoological and Botanical Gardens. 2024; 5(3):395-415. https://doi.org/10.3390/jzbg5030027
Chicago/Turabian StyleErnst, Julie, Claire Underwood, Mandi Wojciehowski, and Thelma Nayquonabe. 2024. "Empathy Capacity-Building through a Community of Practice Approach: Exploring Perceived Impacts and Implications" Journal of Zoological and Botanical Gardens 5, no. 3: 395-415. https://doi.org/10.3390/jzbg5030027
APA StyleErnst, J., Underwood, C., Wojciehowski, M., & Nayquonabe, T. (2024). Empathy Capacity-Building through a Community of Practice Approach: Exploring Perceived Impacts and Implications. Journal of Zoological and Botanical Gardens, 5(3), 395-415. https://doi.org/10.3390/jzbg5030027