|
Showing 1 - 5 of
5 matches in All Departments
Written by respected authorities in the fields of education and
literacy studies, Words: The Foundation of Literacy is a
groundbreaking book for teachers, administrators, and education
students. Dale and Bonnie Johnson present a fresh, inspiring
reminder of why studying language (from word origins to word
structure) is such a vital first step in the development of
students' vocabulary, literacy, writing skills, and overall ability
to learn.At a time when high-stakes testing has squeezed substance
from many curricula, Johnson and Johnson provide ways to enhance
students' understanding, interest, and appreciation of language and
all its subtleties. Words explores how meaning in language is
created by the use and interrelationships of words, phrases, and
sentences, their denotations, connotations, implications, and
ambiguities. From birth, most children exhibit a natural interest
in language: its sounds, nuances, and unpredictable qualities. It
is important to sustain, stimulate, and recapture that natural
interest in the classroom, and Words provides a multitude of
creative and practical techniques for doing so.
The Importance of Average calls attention to the policies and
practices that discriminate against the silent majority of students
in the American educational system. Arguments presented emphasize
the collateral damage caused to average students by legislative
mandates, administrative policies, teaching practices, parenting
beliefs, and adherence to strict psychological constructs. Each of
these factors has created a pervasive psycho-educational belief of
average ability. The authors challenge what they consider as a
pseudo-definition of 'average' that was brought about as an attempt
by policymakers to test their way out of addressing the true
inequities found in society. Further, the authors identify how
educational policymakers have sacrificed the education of an entire
class of students by creating the illusion that underachievement
can be eliminated simply through lowering standards and examination
pass rates. In chronicling the plight of average students, the
authors capture the emotions and attitudes of teachers, parents,
and students whose frustrations have been set aside in order to
meet other special interests. The authors explore methods that
provide students of average knowledge in any given area with the
appropriate tools necessary for succeeding in school. Finally, the
authors argue that there is no such thing as 'average'
intelligence.
Trivializing Teacher Education: The Accreditation Squeeze presents
a critical analysis of the National Council for Accreditation of
Teacher Education (NCATE). This accreditation organization has been
in existence for 50 years and claims to accredit approximately 700
teacher education programs that prepare two-thirds of the nation's
teachers. There is no convincing research, however, that NCATE's
'stamp of approval' makes a difference in teacher preparation
programs or in beginning teachers' competencies. There is evidence
that NCATE is masterful at self-promotion, marketing, and aligning
itself with policy-makers and politicians. This book illustrates
the questionable NCATE processes and requirements and exposes the
exorbitant costs accrued by universities seeking NCATE
accreditation. It points out that the NCATE standards do not
address the major issues that impact teaching and learning. The
book highlights NCATE's support of teacher testing in the face of
evidence that such tests lack predictive validity. It shows how
NCATE is reaching out to accredit for-profit organizations and how
it sends its evaluators to review international programs in the
Middle East. The book calls on NCATE to make the professional
backgrounds of its examiners, reviewers, board members, and staff
transparent. It addresses the attention teacher educators must
devote to mindless, trivial NCATE demands that usurp time that
should be spent on their students and their research. This book
urges teacher educators, college faculties and administrators,
state education officials and legislators, parents of school-age
children, and concerned citizens to open their eyes to this
powerful organization, NCATE, and to examine what it has done to
teacher education in the last half century.
The Importance of Average calls attention to the policies and
practices that discriminate against the silent majority of students
in the American educational system. Arguments presented emphasize
the collateral damage caused to average students by legislative
mandates, administrative policies, teaching practices, parenting
beliefs, and adherence to strict psychological constructs. Each of
these factors has created a pervasive psycho-educational belief of
average ability. The authors challenge what they consider as a
pseudo-definition of 'average' that was brought about as an attempt
by policymakers to test their way out of addressing the true
inequities found in society. Further, the authors identify how
educational policymakers have sacrificed the education of an entire
class of students by creating the illusion that underachievement
can be eliminated simply through lowering standards and examination
pass rates. In chronicling the plight of average students, the
authors capture the emotions and attitudes of teachers, parents,
and students whose frustrations have been set aside in order to
meet other special interests. The authors explore methods that
provide students of average knowledge in any given area with the
appropriate tools necessary for succeeding in school. Finally, the
authors argue that there is no such thing as 'average'
intelligence.
Written by respected authorities in the fields of education and
literacy studies, "Words: The Foundation of Literacy" is a
groundbreaking book for teachers, administrators, and education
students. Dale and Bonnie Johnson present a fresh, inspiring
reminder of why studying language--from word origins to word
structure--is such a vital first step in the development of
students' vocabulary, literacy, writing skills, and overall ability
to learn.
At a time when high-stakes testing has squeezed substance from
many curricula, Johnson and Johnson provide ways to enhance
students' understanding, interest, and appreciation of language and
all its subtleties. "Words" explores how meaning in language is
created by the use and interrelationships of words, phrases, and
sentences, their denotations, connotations, implications, and
ambiguities. From birth, most children exhibit a natural interest
in language--its sounds, nuances, and unpredictable qualities. It
is important to sustain, stimulate, and recapture that natural
interest in the classroom, and "Words" provides a multitude of
creative and practical techniques for doing so.
|
|