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elliott beharrell's avatar

Regardless of the topic at hand such as a math problem, historical event, scientific process, chapter in a novel, short story in a grade 5 text, the best teachers frequently read passages aloud to their class (this takes practice) in a way that conveys clarity, emphasis, and meaning. They pause along the way to soliloquize like Hamlet, make transparent what is going on in their own heads, how they try to parse out the complexities in order to grasp a fuller understanding of the matter. In the process they ask questions of the class to generate student response, perhaps have them write a bit. In this way they show in action how their methods of comprehension, analysis, evaluation play out as they learn. Students of all ages love & benefit from listening to expert teachers who read aloud & show how they themselves engage in the learning process.

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T. Wu's avatar

I appreciate your last sentence that sums up a large part of this piece. In addition to encountering an overemphasis on the definitions of writing genres at the lower grades- teaching 3rd graders about opinion pieces vs fiction, say- I’m encountering a similar fetish with abstraction in 7th grade science. My middle schooler is committing to memory the differences between dependent and independent variables, and the scientific method, falsifiable hypotheses etc. (which as an engineering major I only encountered in grad school). Why not just first learn about natural phenomena well and in detail. Then later address these topics, illustrating them the actual scientific theories they’ve learned already.

I wonder if you have thoughts or have observed this overly meta approach to learning. My kids don’t seem to fully grasp gravity, but hey they’ve heard about control variables.

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