
The Drive to Learn: What the East Asian Experience Tells Us about Raising Students Who Excel
by: Cornelius N. Grove Ed.D. independent scholar author of "The Aptitude Myth" (2013) (Author)
Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Publication Date: 2017/6/5
Language: English
Print Length: 182 pages
ISBN-10: 1475815107
ISBN-13: 9781475815108
Book Description
Countless books and articles have offered remedies for the poor learning outcomes of American schoolchildren. Virtually all of these publications share one thing in common: They propose improvements in the policies and practices controlled by adult educators. Grove believes that our children’s poor learning cannot be totally the fault of educators. Our children are active participants in classrooms, so if there’s a problem with how well our children are learning, then we as parents might be at fault. To discover what our part is and explore what can be done about it, Grove draws on over 100 anthropological studies of children’s learning and child-rearing in China, Japan, and Korea. They reveal that those children, even the youngest ones, are highly receptive to classroom learning. Why do they come into classrooms with attentive and engaged attitudes? How did they acquire the drive to learn? Can American parents benefit from knowing how Chinese, Japanese, and Korean parents think about and carry out child-rearing? The Drive to Learn explores these questions.
About the Author
Countless books and articles have offered remedies for the poor learning outcomes of American schoolchildren. Virtually all of these publications share one thing in common: They propose improvements in the policies and practices controlled by adult educators. Grove believes that our children’s poor learning cannot be totally the fault of educators. Our children are active participants in classrooms, so if there’s a problem with how well our children are learning, then we as parents might be at fault. To discover what our part is and explore what can be done about it, Grove draws on over 100 anthropological studies of children’s learning and child-rearing in China, Japan, and Korea. They reveal that those children, even the youngest ones, are highly receptive to classroom learning. Why do they come into classrooms with attentive and engaged attitudes? How did they acquire the drive to learn? Can American parents benefit from knowing how Chinese, Japanese, and Korean parents think about and carry out child-rearing? The Drive to Learn explores these questions. Read more
The Drive to Learn: What the East Asian Experience Tells Us about Raising Students Who Excel
未经允许不得转载:电子书百科大全 » The Drive to Learn: What the East Asian Experience Tells Us about Raising Students Who Excel
相关推荐
Autism and Adolescence: What Teens and Adults Need to Know (The Way I See It)
Narratives in Educational Research: Methodological Perspectives
A Theory of Applied Linguistics: Ιmagining and Disclosing the Meaning of Design (Educational Linguistics, 65)
Quality Assurance and Accreditation in Higher Education: Issues, Models, and Best Practices
Teaching for Retention: Strategies to Ignite Student Success in Higher Education
Heart at the Center: An Educator's Guide to Sustaining Love, Hope, and Community Through Nonviolence Pedagogy
Critical Philosophy of Mathematics (Advances in Mathematics Education)
Early Childhood Psychopathology: Developmental Models and Treatments
电子书百科大全
评论前必须登录!
立即登录 注册