What's Wrong with Our Schools: and How We Can Fix Them
Autor Michael C. Zwaagstra, Rodney A. Clifton, John C. Longen Limba Engleză Paperback – 16 iul 2010
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781607091585
ISBN-10: 1607091585
Pagini: 190
Dimensiuni: 155 x 231 x 14 mm
Greutate: 0.32 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția R&L Education
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 1607091585
Pagini: 190
Dimensiuni: 155 x 231 x 14 mm
Greutate: 0.32 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția R&L Education
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Cuprins
Part 1 Introduction: Whatever Happened to Common Sense?
Part 2 Part I: Some Things Are Fundamental
Chapter 3 Subject Matter Matters
Chapter 4 Tests Are Good for Students
Chapter 5 Students Need Discipline
Chapter 6 Inclusion Should Not Be Exclusion
Chapter 7 Some Teachers Are Better Than Others
Chapter 8 Some Schools Are Better Than Others
Part 9 Part II: Some Things Are Practical
Chapter 10 Classrooms Should Be Teacher-Centered
Chapter 11 Direct Instruction Is Good Teaching
Chapter 12 Rote Learning and Practice Are Important
Chapter 13 A Little Homework Doesn't Hurt
Chapter 14 Grades Should Reflect Achievement
Chapter 15 A Pass Should Be Earned
Part 16 Part III: Some Things Are Distracting
Chapter 17 Teachers' Unions Don't Always Put Students First
Chapter 18 There Is Too Much "Edu-Babble"
Part 19 Conclusion: Using Common Sense to Obtain Better Schools
Part 2 Part I: Some Things Are Fundamental
Chapter 3 Subject Matter Matters
Chapter 4 Tests Are Good for Students
Chapter 5 Students Need Discipline
Chapter 6 Inclusion Should Not Be Exclusion
Chapter 7 Some Teachers Are Better Than Others
Chapter 8 Some Schools Are Better Than Others
Part 9 Part II: Some Things Are Practical
Chapter 10 Classrooms Should Be Teacher-Centered
Chapter 11 Direct Instruction Is Good Teaching
Chapter 12 Rote Learning and Practice Are Important
Chapter 13 A Little Homework Doesn't Hurt
Chapter 14 Grades Should Reflect Achievement
Chapter 15 A Pass Should Be Earned
Part 16 Part III: Some Things Are Distracting
Chapter 17 Teachers' Unions Don't Always Put Students First
Chapter 18 There Is Too Much "Edu-Babble"
Part 19 Conclusion: Using Common Sense to Obtain Better Schools
Recenzii
This is simply the best book on the public school I have seen. Written in straightforward language, parents are informed about the foolish fads that still afflict our public schools. Consistent with the research and without condescension the book advocates a return to common sense.
A clear, fluent and (yes!) common-sense alternative to the culture of romantic progressivism which has captured so completely the education establishment throughout North America. The authors have read the research, but they draw also critically on classroom experience and make recommendations that are practical in the distinctly unideal reality of today's public school systems.
For parents puzzled by school rules and practices that don't make sense to them, What's Wrong With Our Schools is a useful corrective. It illumines the principal arguments now raging over education policy and explains how to get in-depth information that allows us bewildered parents and other onlookers to figure out who is right.
If you read only one book on current affairs this year, make it this one. What goes on in our schools is at the core of all that happens in our country?what citizens know, what they believe, and how they behave. The authors have marshaled all of the issues at stake in the so-called school wars, explained them lucidly and sensibly, and made recommendations that affect every American parent, teacher, school administrator and taxpayer. They illustrate all sides of the arguments in the vast and often confusing literature on the various aspects of the education debates and they offer practical answers to some of the most vexing questions of the day, beyond spin and image, ideology and the cant. An illuminating, eminently readable guide to the ways in whichwe could make our schools the instruments they should be for educating men and women to live in a democracy..
The sanest, most commonsensical education-reform book I have seen in many years, What's Wrong with Our Schools is a trove of clear-thinking, hard-won front-line wisdom, rich experience, and policy sagacity. Our schools and children will be a lot better off if the authors' advice is widely heeded.
The authors do an outstanding job of puncturing the balloon of progressive education, explaining in straightforward, clear, and compelling fashion why much of American K-12 education has failed over the past couple decades. Whole language, fuzzy math, constructivism, and the usual suspects are nicely critiqued. As What's Wrong With Our Schools indicates, the main culprit in all this is an abandonment of common sense by the gurus who dominate the profession. All in all, a great read, especially for parents wondering whether the emperor has any clothes or not
This fine and brave book more than delivers on its claim of common sense-an uncommon virtue in the world of school reform. It will empower parents and liberate teachers. I hope it will be widely read, for its message desperately needs to be heeded.
A clear, fluent and (yes!) common-sense alternative to the culture of romantic progressivism which has captured so completely the education establishment throughout North America. The authors have read the research, but they draw also critically on classroom experience and make recommendations that are practical in the distinctly unideal reality of today's public school systems.
For parents puzzled by school rules and practices that don't make sense to them, What's Wrong With Our Schools is a useful corrective. It illumines the principal arguments now raging over education policy and explains how to get in-depth information that allows us bewildered parents and other onlookers to figure out who is right.
If you read only one book on current affairs this year, make it this one. What goes on in our schools is at the core of all that happens in our country?what citizens know, what they believe, and how they behave. The authors have marshaled all of the issues at stake in the so-called school wars, explained them lucidly and sensibly, and made recommendations that affect every American parent, teacher, school administrator and taxpayer. They illustrate all sides of the arguments in the vast and often confusing literature on the various aspects of the education debates and they offer practical answers to some of the most vexing questions of the day, beyond spin and image, ideology and the cant. An illuminating, eminently readable guide to the ways in whichwe could make our schools the instruments they should be for educating men and women to live in a democracy..
The sanest, most commonsensical education-reform book I have seen in many years, What's Wrong with Our Schools is a trove of clear-thinking, hard-won front-line wisdom, rich experience, and policy sagacity. Our schools and children will be a lot better off if the authors' advice is widely heeded.
The authors do an outstanding job of puncturing the balloon of progressive education, explaining in straightforward, clear, and compelling fashion why much of American K-12 education has failed over the past couple decades. Whole language, fuzzy math, constructivism, and the usual suspects are nicely critiqued. As What's Wrong With Our Schools indicates, the main culprit in all this is an abandonment of common sense by the gurus who dominate the profession. All in all, a great read, especially for parents wondering whether the emperor has any clothes or not
This fine and brave book more than delivers on its claim of common sense-an uncommon virtue in the world of school reform. It will empower parents and liberate teachers. I hope it will be widely read, for its message desperately needs to be heeded.