- •Isbn 5-89349-136-х (Флинта)
- •000 «Симптрон»
- •Предисловие
- •History of education
- •The Beginning of Formal Education
- •Sumerian and Egyptian Education
- •Other Middle Eastern Education
- •Ancient Greek Education
- •Ancient Roman Education
- •2. The pen story
- •3. The miracle of writing
- •4. Child psychology determines teaching methods
- •5. Let kids be kids
- •6. The first day at school
- •7. How well do our schools perform?
- •8. Schools of the future
- •9. The illiteracy epidemic
- •10. Cultural literacy and the schools
- •11. A. At the anglo-american school
- •В. Making friends
- •12. No place like home for going to school
- •13. A quality education? yes, for a price
- •14. Individual education
- •Objectives of Individual Education
- •Academic Curriculum
- •Creative Curriculum
- •Socialization
- •Advantages of ie
- •15. Grade 3-4
- •I listen and I hear,
- •I look and I see,
- •I do and I understand.
- •16. When your child counts to ten, does he have to use his fingers?
- •17. What to do about homework
- •18. Oyster mver middle school
- •20. Video screens: are they changing the way children learn?
- •21. Curing video addicts*
- •22. Games children play
- •23. New directions in vocational education
- •Open Learning
- •24. Give your child the happiness trait
- •25. Columbia and new york, new york and columbia
- •26. Teachers college
- •27. Education in australia
- •28. Clayfield college
- •Facilities
- •Fine Arts
- •Boarding***
- •29. St patrick's college
- •30. Renewing the teaching profession
- •The Changing Labour Market
- •31. Teacher's work
- •A Teacher's Main Responsibility Is to Teach
- •Students Should Meet Minimum Objectives
- •Students Should Enjoy Learning
- •Teachers Should Assume Good Intentions and a Positive Self-Concept
- •32. Ideal teacher: what is he like?
- •(From "The Diary of a Young English Teacher" by Saw Ginsburg) First Month
- •Third Month
- •34. Good teacher
- •35. Alternative certification demands minimum standards
- •36. Teachers: a dying breed as school year starts
- •37. Testing times
- •1. Religious Teaching in British Schools
- •Civic Life
- •Traditionally Dominant
- •2. Where to Study
- •3. The University of London
- •4. The School of Language Studies
- •5. At the "Tech"
- •6. Oxford
- •7. A Trip to Cambridge and Other Recollections
- •8. Ealing College of Higher Education
- •9. Us Offers Fellowships to Scholars
- •10. The Birth of Writing
- •11. Do You Speak Ancient Greek?
- •Romans, Europeans and "New Russians"
- •12. Study at Home
- •13. For the Young Teacher
- •14. British Teens Spend Sweetly
- •1. Где учиться
- •2. А двойку вам поставит старшекурсник
- •3. С российским дипломом – за границу Как получить сертификат эквивалентности российского образования международным стандартам
- •4. Образование: заграница нам поможет?
- •5. Студент в тумане
- •6. Британской системе образования 700 лет – что в итоге?
- •7. Где учиться в Англии
- •8. Колледж Сент-Лоуренс в графстве Кент
- •9. Родителей не выбирают?
- •10. Хотите вырастить гения? Принимайтесь за дело накануне Рождества
- •11. Как сформировать талант
- •12. Отцы и дети
- •Отцы глазами детей
- •13. Образование, нужное всем и всегда
- •40. Things to do a. Individual Work
- •B. Pair Work
- •C. Group Work
- •Does a Good Education Really Matter?
- •D. Project Work
- •41. Supplementary reading
- •§ 1. On Education
- •§ 2. The Kindergarten
- •§ 3. College
- •The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie*
- •In One Ear and Upside Down*
- •What's Wrong with the Kid?
- •Culture
- •Adolescence*
- •Clean Up Your Room
- •From "The Sandcastle"**
- •From "Oxford Life"
- •1. Lectures Start on Monday
- •II. End of Term Collections****
- •III. Oxford Accent
- •A Reporter's Account
- •Alice In Wonderland
- •13. Nothing to Learn
- •33. Heat and Cold
- •34. No Music Lesson
- •35. At the Lesson
- •38. A Good Student
- •Poems, Limericks
- •I'll tell, "I'm ninety-three."
- •Isn't it delicious
- •Duty of the Student
- •Philosophic Advice
- •Vocabulary of educational terms and their usage
- •40. Things to do 73
- •41. Supplementary reading 78
- •§ 1. On Education 78
- •§ 2. The Kindergarten 79
- •§ 3. College 80
- •Vocabulary of educational terms and their usage 107
4. Child psychology determines teaching methods
(From "Invitation to Psychology" by J. Houston, H. Bee, D.C. Rimm)
A knowledge of the child is the most fundamental and important of the teacher's preparation. Many teachers with thorough knowledge of their subjects fail because they do not understand the boys and girls who are to be taught. Many assume that children are like plastic clay and can be moulded at the will of the teacher. Any observing parent or any intelligent teacher of experience knows better. Boys and girls are not passive lumps of clay; they are living, pulsating, developing, mysterious beings who must be studied and understood before they can be taught in the true sense.
We have come to realize that the most difficult factor in education to understand is the mind of the child to be taught. A knowledge of children's minds and the way they work is certain to convince one that in order to teach efficiently we must get the child's point of view. Many well-conceived aims in education do not bear fruit, simply because the teacher does not understand the workings of children's minds. The teaching is done in terms of adult thinking and means nothing to the child. The 'child's mind understands concrete things rather than abstractions. We must appeal to the child through his everyday experiences and on the plane of his stage of development. Instead of beginning with definitions, abstract principles and laws, the meanings of the things should first be made clear. Otherwise the statements are empty words. Every concept should have its concrete examples to which the mind can turn for illustrations at any time. Instruction of children should begin with experiences personally familiar to the particular children, and make the teaching radiate from those. The teacher's knowledge should be broad and thorough that if the pupils cannot understand one illustration, others can be given immediately. In addition to the knowledge of formal subjects the teacher should know their relation to the life outside the classroom, so the pupils must see the significance of the things they do at school.
Assignments:
1. Look through the text and briefly say what it is about.
2. Translate the text using a dictionary.
5. Let kids be kids
(by Stephen R.C. Hicks)
The newspaper in Indiana town ran a contest for schoolchildren. The students were to create a picture on any topic; the best would be published in the paper.
A second-grader drew a sad-faced earth with the caption "I am weary. I am tired. Please quit wasting me!"* A third-grade girl depicted animals crying near a house under construction, with smokestacks in the distance; the caption read "We want our home back!"
Apparently many children are coming home from school frightened that the world is cold and inhospitable. All the furry animals are being killed and the nice green trees being chopped down. Even breathing air is dangerous.
Motivated by the best of intentions, most teachers want their students to become informed and independent thinkers. But in trying to convey a sense of urgency about such problems, they become frustrated and frightened. They begin to realize that we are living in a hostile world whose problems are too big to handle. And that's an attitude children often acquire early in life.
This does not mean educators and parents should pretend that problems do not exist. We need to take pains** to help children confront them on a scale they can grasp.
Frightened children are not going to grow into adults who can solve the world's problems. That requires a confidence in one's ability to find solutrons. And such healthy self-esteem*** requires nurturing**** over a long period, on a great number of small, day-to-day matters. Too much, too fast, can only destroy it.
__________________________
* «Я больше не могу. Я устала. Пожалуйста, перестаньте зря растрачивать меня!»
** to take pains – прилагать огромные усилия
*** self-esteem – самооценка
**** nurturing – (зд.) воспитание
Assignments:
1. In 3–5 short sentences give the main idea of the article.
2. Translate it using a dictionary.