education

  • check out the carnival

    This week’s Carnival of Education is being hosted over at History is Elementary. My post on games in the college classroom makes an appearance, and there’s plenty more to chew on. Go browse! Continue reading

  • if you listen to one rant today

    Christopher D. Sessums pointed me to this video by George Carlin about why any education system in America is doomed to fail. I am perhaps naive in believing that we up here in Canada have less reason for despair. He’s not saying anything new, but he’s saying it very forcefully. Parental advisory: it’s George Carlin. Continue reading

  • Formal-Operational vs. Post-Formal Thinking: Brains Grow Up

    Formal-operational thinking is absolute, and involves making decisions based on personal experience and logic. Post-formal thinking is more complex, and involves making decisions based on situational constraints and circumstances, and integrating emotion with logic to form context-dependent principles. The distinction is a useful thing to understand when dealing with emerging adults. For example, adolescents have… Continue reading

  • Primary and Secondary Intellectual Abilities in Adolescence

    Primary intellectual abilities include number skills, word fluency, verbal understanding, inductive reasoning, and spatial orientation. These abilities improve until early middle age, and then begin to decline. There are cohort patterns where strength of primary abilities are concerned – for example, our grandparents were better at math than we are because they had less access… Continue reading

  • further thoughts on my thoughts on others’ thoughts

    Open Education has written a very thoughtful post about two of my posts: “characteristics of adolescent thinking” and “mean ’til Hallowe’en.” If either of these posts interested you, you might want to go check out what Open Education has to say about them. Continue reading

  • teacher nightmares

    Please do yourself a favour and go check out A Shrewdness of Apes’ post on teacher nightmares. I guarantee you will recognize your own nightmares in one, if not many, of the accounts. I had no idea that so many people were having the same dreams as I was in the weeks before school began. Continue reading

  • Games in the College Classroom

    This semester, there will be more games. When I taught ESL immersion, I taught the same class for five hours a day, five days a week, for five weeks. Every morning we started with a game, and we usually ended every afternoon with a game as well. In such a circumstance, the content of the… Continue reading

  • Ethnic Identity Formation in Adolescents

    According to one theory, there are three important phases of ethnic identity formation: a phase where ethnic identity is not explored or considered important; a phase where individuals begin to explore their ethnic roots; and a phase where ethnicity takes an important place in the individual’s self-concept. The theory argues that a strong sense of… Continue reading

  • more on discipline

    To continue the conversation that began with the post “mean ’til Hallowe’en,”, I wanted to point out Jose Vilson’s helpful tips on classroom management in an urban school. Regardless of the specificity of his situation, I think his ten points are great reminders for all of us. And for more thoughts on how to maintain… Continue reading

  • Characteristics of Adolescent Thinking

    There are four important characteristics that distinguish adolescent thinking from more mature thinking: adolescent egocentrism (intense preoccupation with one’s own feelings and lack of connection to feelings of others), imaginary audience (the belief that one is the focus of others’ thinking and attention), personal fable (the belief that no one else can possibly understand one’s… Continue reading

About Me

My job is to teach people to read and write; aside from that, I like to learn things.

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