What to Look for in a Classroom: ...and Other Essays"Alfie Kohn has a knack for bursting the bubbles that surround just about every school topic imaginable, from putting kids into uniforms to make them behave better to raising kids' self-esteem by rewarding them with stickers and pizza for reading books and doing homework. This collection of previously published essays reminds us that many schools have veered off course in their day-to-day business. And it's a primer that, if taken seriously, can put schools back on the right track." --Educational LeadershipThrough his writings and speeches, Alfie Kohn has been stirring up controversy for years, demonstrating how the conventional wisdom about education often isn't supported by the available research, and illuminating gaps between our long-term goals for students and what actually goes on in schools. Now What to Look for in a Classroom brings together his most popular articles from Educational Leadership, Phi Delta Kappan, and Education Week--and also from The Atlantic Monthly, the Boston Globe, and other publications. From self-esteem to school uniforms, from grade inflation to character education, Kohn raises a series of provocative questions about the status quo in this collection of incisive essays. He challenges us to reconsider some of our most basic assumptions about children and education. Can good values really be instilled in students? What, if anything, lies behind the label of attention deficit disorder? Are there solid data to support our skepticism about watching TV? Might such allegedly enlightened practices as authentic assessment, logical consequences, and Total Quality education turn out to be detrimental? Whether he is explaining why cooperative learning can be so threatening or why detracking is so fiercely opposed, Kohn offers a fresh, informed, and frequently disconcerting perspective on the major issues in education. In the And, his critical examination of current practice is complemented by a vision of what schooling ought to be. Kohn argues for giving children more opportunity to participate in their own schooling, for transforming classrooms into caring communities, and for providing the kind of education that taps and nourishes children's curiosity. Through all these essays, Kohn calls us back to our own ideals, showing us how we can be more effective at helping students to become good learners and good people. |
Contents
The Limits of Teaching Skills | 3 |
Beyond Discipline | 11 |
Making Sense | 47 |
Copyright | |
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academic achievement activities adults American approach attention become behavior believe better called caring challenge Chapter character character education child choice classroom competition concerned cooperative cooperative learning course critics curriculum decisions Development discussion effect efforts evidence example experience fact failure feel follow give given goals going grades human hyperactive idea important individual interest issues Journal kids kind learning less look matter means moral motivation nature offer parents particular performance person possible practice Press problem programs promote prosocial Psychology published question reading reason respect response rewards self-esteem sense simply skills social someone sort standards studies success suggest talk task teachers teaching television things tion told trying turn University values watching York