#20 in Education theory books
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Reddit mentions of Teaching As a Subversive Activity
Sentiment score: 2
Reddit mentions: 3
We found 3 Reddit mentions of Teaching As a Subversive Activity. Here are the top ones.
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Specs:
Color | White |
Height | 8.5 Inches |
Length | 5.5 Inches |
Number of items | 1 |
Release date | July 1971 |
Weight | 0.51147244784 Pounds |
Width | 0.53 Inches |
I just bought a book called Teaching as a Subversive Activity at a thrift store. I am in the middle of reading it.
Great read so far. It's right up the guy in the article's alley.
Absolutely - history has shown us that public education can be used in exactly that way, in Nazi Germany and the former USSR. I think in a lot of ways those specific programs you mention are detrimental since they do more to just enforce meaningless metrics and quotas than they do to cultivate thinking young minds.
We need smarter teachers. And you know what: you get what you pay for. Teachers are so underpaid but they alone are going to be responsible for the quality of future generations, so we're only cheating ourselves. But if we were serious about our future as a society, we'd have better paid teachers, and more of them, and they would be free to be independent and come up with innovative lessons instead of teaching off rubrics which might not work for every class and child. This book made me want to be a teacher.
There's education, then there is education. The US has yet to unify what it considers to be a nationally accepted curriculum and as such schools have been able to pick and choose subject matter to teach and not teach. If you want to understand what modern education is here is some suggested reading which explains how schools are structured and why they are built the way they are.