learning
-
how to fix the schools
I love the idealism of this post about revamping the school system from the blog “Sees, Shoots and Leaves.” It stirs up an old longing I have to be a governess in charge of three or four children’s education, with the resources and time to allow each of them to progress at their own rate… Continue reading
-
does this mean I let them take them out of their bags?
A post on the use of mobile devices in the classroom. Can someone please tell me once and for all whether I should keep confiscating every cell phone I see? Continue reading
-
ways of knowing: part 2
How can understanding the different ways of knowing (see “ways of knowing: part 1”) help us understand how students learn? According to research, most college/first-year university students are in the absolute or transitional stages of knowing, with a few in the independent stage. In a literature class, “absolute knowers” are often frustrated. They expect to… Continue reading
-
ways of knowing: part 1
In studying the psychology of learning, we look at a number of models of different “ways of knowing.” For example, Baxter Magolda’s Model of Epistemological Reflection divides ways of knowing into four stages: Absolute Knowing, Transitional Knowing, Independent Knowing and Contextual Knowing. We all start out in the first stage, and achievement of later stages… Continue reading
-
Class Size: The Root of All Evil
My main beef with the educational system as it stands, from kindergarten up through university, is with class size. I believe that if every class in the country were reduced to a maximum of fifteen students, many, if not most, of our educational and social ills would be resolved. Children, young adults and adults would… Continue reading
-
Overture
I’ve been meaning for years now to write about teaching. And I’ve been meaning to write a blog. The fundamental question, where blogging is concerned, is whether one has anything to say. I don’t know a whole lot about most things, and nothing I have to say about those things would be very meaningful. When… Continue reading
About Me
My job is to teach people to read and write; aside from that, I like to learn things.