Silence–reflection–spirituality: an autoethnography of online graduate teaching
Abstrak
This article presents an autoethnographic study that explores the meanings of silence in synchronous online graduate classrooms. Drawing from reflective journals, course interactions, and personal narratives, the paper examines how silence operates not merely as absence of voice but as a pedagogical and spiritual space. The analysis identifies four interrelated patterns of silence—listening silence, resistant silence, contemplative silence, and relational silence—and interprets their significance for both teacher identity and student learning. By employing autoethnography, the study highlights the entanglement of personal experience, cultural context, and pedagogical practice, offering thick descriptions of classroom moments where silence shaped understanding and reflection. The findings suggest that silence functions as a site of reflexivity, fostering deeper awareness of teacher spirituality, professional vulnerability, and relational ethics. The paper argues that silence in online classrooms can be reimagined not as disengagement but as a resource for cultivating presence, critical awareness, and spiritual depth in teaching. This study contributes to anthropological debates on silence and to educational discourse on online pedagogy, proposing the framework Silence–Reflection–Spirituality as a lens for understanding teacher practice in digital contexts. Implications for cross-cultural pedagogy, teacher development, and future anthropological inquiries into silence are discussed.
Topik & Kata Kunci
Penulis (3)
Anirutt Somsao
Thanaporn Saelim
Wiralphat Wongwatkasem
Akses Cepat
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- 2026
- Sumber Database
- DOAJ
- DOI
- 10.1080/2331186X.2026.2646353
- Akses
- Open Access ✓