“Teaching Embodied is well written and clear—a delight to read. It does a beautiful job of illustrating, persuasively, culture as tacit, embodied, and intercorporeal.”
— Kathryn M. Anderson-Levitt, University of California, Los Angeles
“In the wonderful Teaching Embodied, Hayashi and Tobin remind us that teachers have bodies and that those bodies are formed in and are expressions of culture. Teaching is a cultural activity, but explorations of teaching remain abstract, disembodied—more mind than body, or heart. Any preschool teacher, as I was for a dozen years, understands the physicality of teaching. Hayashi and Tobin take the reader inside this wonderfully physical world. In this watershed study, they make visible what every teacher knows implicitly. The body is integral to understanding teaching.”
— Daniel James Walsh, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
“Hayashi and Tobin’s study is an exemplar in contemporary psychological anthropology that builds upon and expands Tobin’s classic video ethnographic methods to paint a compelling portrait of teaching and learning in Japanese preschool classrooms as embodied, collective, and intercorporeal. The book offers a welcome antidote to overly rationalized efforts to quantify and manualize the daily lives of children and teachers in preschool classrooms.”
— Gail M. Boldt, Pennsylvania State University
“Even for those without children, Teaching Embodied offers cultural insights that explain many fascinating details of Japan’s group society.”
— Japan Times
“As someone who has spent twenty years living and working in Japan, both as a teacher of English and student of Japanese culture, and had the opportunity to work in kindergartens and nursery schools in both cultures, I found the descriptions in Teaching Embodied captivating and full of cultural insight. The Japanese government wisely sent out emissaries to the rest of the world in order to bring back knowledge to develop the nation after the Meiji Restoration in the late nineteenth century. America could also learn much from the Japanese regarding the implementation of an educational system that nurtures the development of sensitivity and consideration of others. This extremely important work is highly recommended for those interested in gaining a more in depth understanding of the Japanese and their culture, but also anyone involved in child development and education.”
— Teachers College Record
“Even readers unfamiliar with the prior comparative studies will find this volume engaging and enlightening on the topics of teaching and of cultural practice.”
— Education Review
“Education is one of the most parochial of all disciplines, and early childhood education practices are perhaps the most insulated of all. Accordingly, this examination of teaching in learning in Japanese preschools by Hayashi and Tobin (both, Univ. of Georgia) is especially welcome. Examining how Japanese preschool teachers act, talk, and think, Teaching Embodied closely follows three practitioners and is based upon extended observations, interviews, and analysis of video recordings of classroom behaviors. As a result of this detail, the reader is provided an unparalleled understanding of and appreciation for the practices of Japanese preschool teachers. Organized into seven chapters, the book explores mimamoru (teaching by watching and waiting), the pedagogy of feelings, the pedagogy of peripheral participation, learning embodied culture, expertise, early childhood education policy as a cultural practice, and the notion of reassembling the cultural. The book assists readers in thinking about the practices common in preschool settings and imagining alternative ways of doing things. Rich with photographs, anecdotes, and examples of practice, the book provides a marvelous complement to Carol Anne Wien's Emergent Curriculum in the Primary Classroom: Interpreting the Reggio Emilia Approach in Schools. . . . Highly recommended.”
— Choice