This is a thought-provoking book written by Rolf Arnold, a German professor of adult education…. I would recommend this book, particularly as a course text for teacher training. What stands out in this book is Arnold’s passion for wanting to assist educators to move away from traditional instructive practice. When read carefully this book has a powerful capacity to encourage teachers to reflect on their teaching practice, and thus this book is also particularly useful to help teaching practitioners understand why and how they should move away from traditional instruction. I would also therefore recommend this book for all educators who are actively seeking to improve their teaching competencies. Finally, the LENA learning model framework is of significant importance in this book and provides an excellent comparison to other internationally recognized models.

Adult Education Quarterly

In How to Teach without Instructing: 29 Smart Rules for Educators Rolf Arnold presents answers to the question that support teachers in their effort to put more emphasis on the student perspective in their teaching and thereby enable self-paced, sustained learning. He is consistently true to his thesis that learning is, at its core, always self-directed and he provides a wide range of practical experience in suggesting opportunities for future action. He is not lecturing, but rather encouraging, motivating, thoughtful, and refreshing—challenging the reader to choose tomorrow to venture out on their own, or to continue down a familiar path.

- Dr. Hanns Petillon, professor, Institute for Childhood and Adolescent Education, University of Koblenz-Landau, Germany,

The two most important keystones for a successful learning process are liveliness and sustainability. Rolf Arnold has developed in this sense a system of twenty-nine instructions for teaching to bolster the courage and ability of the teachers for creating various and ‎imaginative arrangements of learning. This is a book to use in practical situations in school, university, or other institutions of education. Readers find checklists, questionaries for self-reflection, and case studies.

- Dr. Christiane Griese, professor, Institute for Education, Technical University of Berlin, Germany,

“Teaching” and “learning” are two interrelated terms used to express our thinking about a major aspect of human development. However, didactics developed into an art, the “art” of teaching, while the processes of learning were neglected and not researched. Nowadays, many people perceive “learning” as an undesirable activity. The experience of learning is thought of as something expected of them from the outside and it is often remembered as stressful, a pressure to perform, a fear of failure, and alienation. But there are also some enriching experiences such as the joy of discovery, to ultimately achieve after many attempts something that you could not do previously, or to see a situation in a new light. How to Teach Without Instructing relinks teaching and learning. It examines the teaching practices in institutions of learning and formulates “rules” that assist teachers in their efforts to focus their teaching on the learner. The rules are based on situations that are routinely encountered in the teaching environment.
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How to Teach Without Instructing relinks teaching and learning. It examines the teaching practices in institutions of learning and formulates “rules” that assist teachers in their efforts to focus their teaching on the learner. The rules are based on situations that are routinely encountered in the teaching environment.
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CONTENTS Author’s Introduction: Teaching and Learning: Two Sides of the Same Coin Rules for Smart Teaching Rule 1: Examine your own learning theory! I learned it somewhere else. “We are all capable, but are often just out of practice.” Rule 2: Support the competence competence of the learner! Rule 3: Strengthen the learner’s self-learner skills! If you see that something is not working, let it be! What to do? Rule 4: Base the learning content on the learner’s experience! Rule 5: Focus your teaching on developing talent! Reinvent the learner! How to avoid learning goals, yet still be effective Rule 6: Exercise situational and reflective educational activities! Preparation of the second order Rule 7: Relate your teaching activity to skill profiles! “Portfolio, therefore I am?” Rule 8: Try to create individual learning scenarios! Rule 9: Promote self-paced eLearning by your students! Rule 10: Practice triumvirate rule as you select, prepare, and deliver! Rule 11: Stage the learning process to be an effective experience! Rule 12: Follow the criteria for vibrant and long lasting learning! Rule 13: Learn how to “teach in stereo!” Rule 14: Train your sense of appreciation! Rule 15: Provide the framework and building materials for the learners’ learning projects! Rule 16: Apply the concept of learning by doing! Rule 17: Be devoted to your own personality development! Teachers as mentors A cure for educational narcissism Rule 18: Surprise the students by using imaginative methods! On the gradual disappearance of mediated learning Rule 19: Expand your repertoire of methods! Rule 20: Review your own teaching style! Rule 21: Develop a preference for “open media” developed with the students! Media should become a form of student expression! Rule 22: Free yourself from hasty typifications! The differences in learning behaviors have been widely studied. Avoid learning types: “All inclusive” didactics! Rule 23: Practice dealing with classroom interruptions/distractions! Rule 24: Let outcomes guide your teaching activities! Rule 25: Follow the didactic debate! Didactic professionalism Didactics - the science of professional teaching Rule 26: Develop and use various forms of professional testing! Rule 27: Increase the feedback opportunities available to your users! Rule 28: Participate in the organizational and team development! Rule 29: Plan your own professional competency development! Afterword: Thoughts on the patent fears of teachers and educational theorists
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781475817751
Publisert
2015-06-09
Utgiver
Vendor
Rowman & Littlefield
Vekt
467 gr
Høyde
236 mm
Bredde
161 mm
Dybde
20 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
194

Forfatter

Biographical note

Rolf Arnold, PhD, obtained his doctorate at the University of Heidelberg, worked thereafter in an International Adult Education Centre, obtained his postdoctoral qualification at the Distance University of Hagen, Germany, in 1987, and has been working since 1990 at the Department of Pedagogics (in the fields of Vocational and Adult Education) at the Technical University of Kaiserslautern, Germany. He is also Scientific Director of the Distance and Independent Studies Center (DISC), and the Speaker of the Virtual Campus Rhineland‐Palatinate (VCRP).