CRITICAL THINKING AND LEARNERS CENTERED LEARNING (A FREE SEMINAR)
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Teachers
lecture and drill. Active integration of the students’ daily non-academic experience
is rare. Little time is spent stimulating students questions. Students are
expected to receive knowledge given to them; they are not typically encouraged
to doubt what they are told in the classroom, or what is written in their
texts, students’ personal point of view or philosophies are considered
irrelevant to education.
Classroom
with teacher talking and students listening is the rule. Ninety percent of
teacher questions require no more thought than recall. Dense and typically
speed coverage of content is typically followed by content-specific testing.
Inter- disciplinary synthesis is ordinary viewed as a personal responsibility
of the student and is not routinely tested. Technical specialization is
considered the natural goal of schooling and is correlated with getting a job.
Few multi-logical issues or problems are discussed or assigned and even fewer
teachers know how to conduct such discussions, or assess student participation
in them. Students are rarely expected to engage in dialogical and dialectical
reasoning.
Most
teachers made it through their college classes by mainly learning the standard
textbook answers and were never given an opportunity nor encouraged to
determine whether what their text or the professor said was justified by their
own thinking. As a result, predictable results will follow since students do
not learn how to gather, analyze, synthesize and assess information. They do
not learn how to recognize and define problems for themselves.
“Knowledge
can be given to one who upon receiving it, knows it compared to “Knowledge must
be created and in a sense, rediscovered by each learner”. Only if we see the
contrast between these views clearly, will we be empowered to move from the
former conception to the latter.
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