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,