- •Isbn 5-89349-136-х (Флинта)
- •000 «Симптрон»
- •Предисловие
- •History of education
- •The Beginning of Formal Education
- •Sumerian and Egyptian Education
- •Other Middle Eastern Education
- •Ancient Greek Education
- •Ancient Roman Education
- •2. The pen story
- •3. The miracle of writing
- •4. Child psychology determines teaching methods
- •5. Let kids be kids
- •6. The first day at school
- •7. How well do our schools perform?
- •8. Schools of the future
- •9. The illiteracy epidemic
- •10. Cultural literacy and the schools
- •11. A. At the anglo-american school
- •В. Making friends
- •12. No place like home for going to school
- •13. A quality education? yes, for a price
- •14. Individual education
- •Objectives of Individual Education
- •Academic Curriculum
- •Creative Curriculum
- •Socialization
- •Advantages of ie
- •15. Grade 3-4
- •I listen and I hear,
- •I look and I see,
- •I do and I understand.
- •16. When your child counts to ten, does he have to use his fingers?
- •17. What to do about homework
- •18. Oyster mver middle school
- •20. Video screens: are they changing the way children learn?
- •21. Curing video addicts*
- •22. Games children play
- •23. New directions in vocational education
- •Open Learning
- •24. Give your child the happiness trait
- •25. Columbia and new york, new york and columbia
- •26. Teachers college
- •27. Education in australia
- •28. Clayfield college
- •Facilities
- •Fine Arts
- •Boarding***
- •29. St patrick's college
- •30. Renewing the teaching profession
- •The Changing Labour Market
- •31. Teacher's work
- •A Teacher's Main Responsibility Is to Teach
- •Students Should Meet Minimum Objectives
- •Students Should Enjoy Learning
- •Teachers Should Assume Good Intentions and a Positive Self-Concept
- •32. Ideal teacher: what is he like?
- •(From "The Diary of a Young English Teacher" by Saw Ginsburg) First Month
- •Third Month
- •34. Good teacher
- •35. Alternative certification demands minimum standards
- •36. Teachers: a dying breed as school year starts
- •37. Testing times
- •1. Religious Teaching in British Schools
- •Civic Life
- •Traditionally Dominant
- •2. Where to Study
- •3. The University of London
- •4. The School of Language Studies
- •5. At the "Tech"
- •6. Oxford
- •7. A Trip to Cambridge and Other Recollections
- •8. Ealing College of Higher Education
- •9. Us Offers Fellowships to Scholars
- •10. The Birth of Writing
- •11. Do You Speak Ancient Greek?
- •Romans, Europeans and "New Russians"
- •12. Study at Home
- •13. For the Young Teacher
- •14. British Teens Spend Sweetly
- •1. Где учиться
- •2. А двойку вам поставит старшекурсник
- •3. С российским дипломом – за границу Как получить сертификат эквивалентности российского образования международным стандартам
- •4. Образование: заграница нам поможет?
- •5. Студент в тумане
- •6. Британской системе образования 700 лет – что в итоге?
- •7. Где учиться в Англии
- •8. Колледж Сент-Лоуренс в графстве Кент
- •9. Родителей не выбирают?
- •10. Хотите вырастить гения? Принимайтесь за дело накануне Рождества
- •11. Как сформировать талант
- •12. Отцы и дети
- •Отцы глазами детей
- •13. Образование, нужное всем и всегда
- •40. Things to do a. Individual Work
- •B. Pair Work
- •C. Group Work
- •Does a Good Education Really Matter?
- •D. Project Work
- •41. Supplementary reading
- •§ 1. On Education
- •§ 2. The Kindergarten
- •§ 3. College
- •The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie*
- •In One Ear and Upside Down*
- •What's Wrong with the Kid?
- •Culture
- •Adolescence*
- •Clean Up Your Room
- •From "The Sandcastle"**
- •From "Oxford Life"
- •1. Lectures Start on Monday
- •II. End of Term Collections****
- •III. Oxford Accent
- •A Reporter's Account
- •Alice In Wonderland
- •13. Nothing to Learn
- •33. Heat and Cold
- •34. No Music Lesson
- •35. At the Lesson
- •38. A Good Student
- •Poems, Limericks
- •I'll tell, "I'm ninety-three."
- •Isn't it delicious
- •Duty of the Student
- •Philosophic Advice
- •Vocabulary of educational terms and their usage
- •40. Things to do 73
- •41. Supplementary reading 78
- •§ 1. On Education 78
- •§ 2. The Kindergarten 79
- •§ 3. College 80
- •Vocabulary of educational terms and their usage 107
From "Oxford Life"
(by Dacre Balsden)
1. Lectures Start on Monday
Lectures start on the first Monday of term. Lecturers are sometimes in fashion; lectures as such are never in fashion.
Why take notes when you could as well read it all in a book? The question is unanswerable.
In some subjects the lecture-list is itself carefully organized by the Faculty, so that all the necessary lectures are given and given in the terms in which undergraduates need them. In other faculties the freedom of the lecturer is not so rigidly curtailed.* Let a lecturer lecture on whatever subject he chosen. If he hopes for an audience, he will choose a subject useful to undergraduates, and he will lecture on it twice a week. If he does not care about the size of his audience and prefers to lecture on some small field of learning on which he is researching or writing a learned paper, he will lecture one hour a week. "Thursday at 11, Mr Smooth, 'Plutarch, On the Virtue of Women.' "**
Dons*** in general hate lectures as much as undergraduates. That is why they lecture so badly. Nobody has ever taught them how to lecture well. There is a Delegacy**** in Oxford for the training of schoolmasters; there is no delegacy for the training of dons.
_______________________
* to be rigidly curtailed – быть строго ограниченным
** Плутарх «О женской добродетели»
*** a don – преподаватель
**** Delegacy of Training – Управление по подготовке школьных Учителей
On the first Monday the lecturer has his largest audience for the term. Where there are a hundred young men and women today, there will, in eight weeks times, be no more than five or six. Where there is an audience of two today, there will perhaps be one next week and, after that, no audience at all.
A professor's lecture is sometimes like the "pas scul" of a prima ballerina. He appears; he lectures; he retires. And then after an interval, he lectures again. But the College tutor's public lecture is an interruption in a week otherwise devoted to teaching pupils in his rooms, listening to their essays and talking about them. These are "private hours" – "tutes," as the undergraduates call them, or tutorials. Sometimes a pupil comes along, sometimes in a pair, sometimes with two or three others.
Young tutors find the hour too long, old tutors find it too short. Undergraduates find it very long indeed and if there is no clock in the room, they find it even longer. When you reach a tutor's age, it is less easy to listen than to talk, and observant undergraduates quickly realize that their tutors criticize in detail the final sentences of their essays but give little evidence of having observed the rest*. There is a splendid story of the great Ingram Bywater**.
"Ah," he said, in greeting, to his pupil, "what is the subject of you essay? Expediency? Splendid. Then will you read what you have written?"
At the end, he roused himself. He said, "For the next week, will you write an essay on– er – Expediency? That is all."
Had he slept through the whole of the essay? Or was he uttering the most devastating criticism?*** The pupils never knew.