|
Showing 1 - 4 of
4 matches in All Departments
This book presents a lively and accessible way to use the ancient
figure of Socrates to teach modern psychology that avoids the
didactic lecture and sterile textbook. In the online age, is a
living teacher even needed? What can college students learn
face-to-face from a teacher they cannot learn anywhere else? The
answer is what most teachers already seek to do: help students
think critically, clearly define concepts, logically reason from
premises to conclusions, engage in thoughtful and persuasive
communication, and actively engage the franchise of democratic
citizenship. But achieving these outcomes requires an intimate,
interpersonal learning community. This book presents a plan for
using the ancient figure of Socrates and his Method to realize
humane learning outcomes in the context of psychology.
This book presents a lively and accessible way to use the ancient
figure of Socrates to teach modern psychology that avoids the
didactic lecture and sterile textbook. In the online age, is a
living teacher even needed? What can college students learn
face-to-face from a teacher they cannot learn anywhere else? The
answer is what most teachers already seek to do: help students
think critically, clearly define concepts, logically reason from
premises to conclusions, engage in thoughtful and persuasive
communication, and actively engage the franchise of democratic
citizenship. But achieving these outcomes requires an intimate,
interpersonal learning community. This book presents a plan for
using the ancient figure of Socrates and his Method to realize
humane learning outcomes in the context of psychology.
This book takes readers on a tour of a day in the life of a public
elementary school in an effort to give parents and other
stakeholders a sense of the realities of the classroom. The tour
reveals ten worrisome things about today's schools and considers
what to do about them. Dillon emphasizes the need for future
schools to be places filled with adventure and high purpose, with
classrooms small enough to waste only a minimum of time. They
should be free from stifling levels of bureaucracy, supervised by
rotating teacher administrators rather than career managers. The
book asserts that schools should be staffed by scholarly and
engaged teaching professionals dedicated to helping students live a
healthy adult life in a democracy rather than imposing a
one-size-fits-all, furiously assessed college prep curriculum on
everyone. In all, Dillon argues, schools should be places with
classrooms of narrow ability ranges dedicated to teaching a
coherent curriculum, all in a context of full buy-in and support
from students' families. Let's go inside today's elementary
schools.
|
|
Email address subscribed successfully.
A activation email has been sent to you.
Please click the link in that email to activate your subscription.