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Higher education institutions are increasingly concerned with the
quality of their teaching and learning experiences they provide for
students, including the increasing number from overseas. In this
text, some of the leading authorities in the field bring together
current research and sound practical advice on the provision of
quality teaching and learning for overseas students. The text
represents a wide range of students' overseas background
experiences including the Pacific Rim, China and the European
Community.
Higher education institutions are increasingly concerned with the
quality of their teaching and learning experiences they provide for
students, including the increasing number from overseas. In this
text, some of the leading authorities in the field bring together
current research and sound practical advice on the provision of
quality teaching and learning for overseas students. The text
represents a wide range of students' overseas background
experiences including the Pacific Rim, China and the European
Community.
A look at primary education as it struggles to create for itself a
post-Plowden ideology. The author argues first of all that a
"teacher- centred" approach to teaching in the primary school,
especially in the later years, is actually in the best interests of
the children. The teacher must be seen to have ultimate
responsibility for what and how children learn. At the heart of the
complex relationship between teaching and learning, is the subject
matter of teaching defined in the broadest sense. The upshot of
debates about teaching methods, matching, and curriculum
organization, should be a focusing upon the tasks set for children,
in order to foster their learning. McNamara then tries to define
the distinctive professional expertise of the primary teacher - the
application of subject knowledge within the special circumstances
of the classroom - and to show how this body of educational
knowledge is both derived from practice, and may be of practical
use to others.
In this provocative book, David McNamara argues that a
`teacher-centred' approch to teaching in the primary school,
especially in the later years is actually in the best interests of
the children - that the teacher must be seen to have ultimate
responsibility for what and how children learn. He attempts to
define the distinctive professional expertise of the primary
teacher - the application of subject knowledge within the special
circumstances of the classroom - and to show how this expertise can
be articulated to establish a body of educational knowledge which
is both derived from practice and practically useful to others.At a
time when increasing emphasis is being placed on the role of the
practising teacher as a mentor in intitial teacher education, this
book will help teachers at all levels to define their own role in
the creation of educational knowledge.
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