A groundbreaking analysis of how teachers actually teach and have taught in the past.
The quality and effectiveness of teaching are a constant subject of discussion within the profession and among the broader public. Most of that conversation focuses on the question of how teachers should teach. In The Enduring Classroom, veteran teacher and scholar of education Larry Cuban explores different questions, ones that just might be more important: How have teachers actually taught? How do they teach now? And what can we learn from both?
Examining both past and present is crucial, Cuban explains. If reformers want teachers to adopt new techniques, they need to understand what teachers are currently doing if they want to have any hope of having their innovations implemented. Cuban takes us into classrooms then and now, using observations from contemporary research as well as a rich historical archive of classroom accounts, along the way asking larger questions about teacher training and the individual motivations of people in the classroom. Do teachers freely choose how to teach, or are they driven by their beliefs and values about teaching and learning? What role do students play in determining how teachers teach? Do teachers teach as they were taught? By asking and answering these and other policy questions with the aid of concrete data about actual classroom practices, Cuban helps us make a crucial step toward creating reforms that could actually improve instruction.
The quality and effectiveness of teaching are a constant subject of discussion within the profession and among the broader public. Most of that conversation focuses on the question of how teachers should teach. In The Enduring Classroom, veteran teacher and scholar of education Larry Cuban explores different questions, ones that just might be more important: How have teachers actually taught? How do they teach now? And what can we learn from both?
Examining both past and present is crucial, Cuban explains. If reformers want teachers to adopt new techniques, they need to understand what teachers are currently doing if they want to have any hope of having their innovations implemented. Cuban takes us into classrooms then and now, using observations from contemporary research as well as a rich historical archive of classroom accounts, along the way asking larger questions about teacher training and the individual motivations of people in the classroom. Do teachers freely choose how to teach, or are they driven by their beliefs and values about teaching and learning? What role do students play in determining how teachers teach? Do teachers teach as they were taught? By asking and answering these and other policy questions with the aid of concrete data about actual classroom practices, Cuban helps us make a crucial step toward creating reforms that could actually improve instruction.
Les mer
Preface
1 How Have US Public School Teachers Taught?
2 Have Public Schools and Teaching Practices Changed over Time?
3 Why Have Schooling and Classroom Practice Been Stable over Time?
4 How Should Teachers Teach?
5 How Do Teachers Teach Now?
6 Why Have Changing and Conserving Been Hallmarks of US Public Schooling and Teaching Practice?
Acknowledgments
Notes
Index
1 How Have US Public School Teachers Taught?
2 Have Public Schools and Teaching Practices Changed over Time?
3 Why Have Schooling and Classroom Practice Been Stable over Time?
4 How Should Teachers Teach?
5 How Do Teachers Teach Now?
6 Why Have Changing and Conserving Been Hallmarks of US Public Schooling and Teaching Practice?
Acknowledgments
Notes
Index
Les mer
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780226829692
Publisert
2023-10-10
Utgiver
The University of Chicago Press; University of Chicago Press
Vekt
286 gr
Høyde
229 mm
Bredde
152 mm
Dybde
15 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
136
Forfatter