1st Edition

Quality Teaching A Sample of Cases

By Edgar Stones Copyright 1994
    346 Pages
    by Routledge

    346 Pages
    by Routledge

    First Published in 2004. By detailed analysis of numerous classroom case studies, the author aims to show that true quality teaching is achieved only by sensitivitiy to the interplay between the processes by which children acquire knowledge.

    1 Learning of quality 2 Aiming for quality 3 Analyses of quality 1: conceptual analysis 4 Analyses of quality 2: pedagogical analysis 5 Concepts of quality 6 Skills of quality 7 Quality problem solving 8 Assessment of quality 1: problems of testing 9 Assessment of quality 2: a sample of studies 10 Cultivating quality 11 Quality quality

    Biography

    Professor Edgar Stones

    `Stones' book makes use of the whole body of empirically based psychological knowledge...It is written with a delightful and welcome lack of jargon and pomposity, it gives one great hope for the future.' - Assessment and Evaluation in Higher Education

    `This book is fascinating, Sones raises important issues about the nature of teaching and learning, the structure of knowledge and the assessment of children's learning. (It) is a very important book: essential reading for psychologists, teachers, teacher educators and educational policymakers.' - British Journal of Psychology

    `One rarely comes across truly original ideas about teacher education in today's professional literatue. In this context Quality Teaching is like a breath of fresh air in a closed room rapidly becoming filled with imitative rhetoric ...conceptual change is a painful process that often begins with the class of dissenting voices. I can think of no tuer test of one's tolerance for cognotive dissonance than Quality Teaching: provocative, ironic and urbane.' - Educational Researcher

    Stone's book makes use of a whole body of empirically based psychological knowledge....It gives one great hope for the future. - Assessment and Evaluation in Higher Education