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Fill in the correct prepositions. Make some of the items more complete.

UNIT I. Education (Pedagogy) History | Follow-up Activities | Text B. Thinking About Teaching | Decide whether the following statements are true, false or vague according to text B. | Four Characteristics Most Descriptive of the Best Teachers | B) Write questions to the answers. | Read the text, pay attention to the words in italics and in brackets. Enrich your vocabulary by comparing English and Russian equivalents. | Translate the sentences. Pay attention to the words in italics. | Scan text B carefully paying attention to the words in bold type. | Fill in the correct prepositions. |


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  2. A. Put the verbs into correct past form
  3. A. Put the verbs into correct past form
  4. Additional test items (4 test items)
  5. And they also help you on selling the items you bought from them. They offer ship-drop, this means you sell the items,
  6. Are these sentences true or false? Correct the false sentences.
  7. Are these sentences true or false? Correct the false sentences.

1. The word pedagogy comes __ the ancient Greek ”paidagogas”.

2. Young people were educated __ apprenticeship

3. Major figures in the history __ education include Aristotle, Plato and others.

4. A genuine teacher is supposed to treat pupils __ respect

5. A teacher’s personality may be replaced __ a computer

6. Some educators claim that teaching cannot be considered __

science alone

7. Teaching does not consist __ a fixed set of principles

8. Good teachers use the same skills used __ artists and scientists

9. Insight, for example, is based __ seeing something in a new light

10.Education is a difficult work to be done __ kindness, watching, percept, praise.

 

13. a) Investigate the famous educator’s biography; b) Try to write questions to the answers. Think how you would shoot/make a film about Friedrich Froebel. You could start from: “There are three things in the film I am going to make about Friedrich Froebel …”

Friedrich Froebel (1782-1852). Froebel was born in Germany. Froebel’s mother died when he was only 9 months old. He worked as a forester, chemist’s assistant, and museum curator. He eventually found his true vocation as an educator. He saw nature as a prime source for learning. The educator believed that schools should provide a warm and supportive environment for children. In 1837 Froebel founded the first kindergarten (“child’s garden”) to cultivate the child’s development and socialization. In his opinion, sand, clay and so on stimulated the child’s imagination. Froebel saw the teacher as a moral and cultural model for children.

1. … … …? No, only 9 months old.

2. … … …? He worked as a forester, and museum curator…

3. … … …? Nature.

4. … … …? School should provide a warm environment.

5. … … …? In 1837.

6.... … …? To cultivate the child’s development.

7. … … …? Clay, sand and so on.

8. … … …? He saw the teacher as a cultural model.

9. … … …? His true vocation was an educator.

10. … … …? Yes, he was born in Germany.

 

Grammar Tutorials: Question Techniques

 

14. Make thorough analysis of the questions given below. Derive a proper rule for making questions. Try to remember the main principles of the famous educators. Compose your own questions:

General, Alternative, Disjunctive, Subject, Indirect, and Special using the famous educators’ biographies below.

1. Did Amos Komensky approach learning in a logical way? (General)

2. Did Amos Komensky write many textbooks or scientific papers? (Alternative)

3. John Lock was an English educator, wasn’t he? (Disjunctive)

4. Who identified two levels of effective teachers? (Subject)

5. I wonder, who had a romantic view on education? (Indirect)

6. What should a school resemble according to Pestalozzi? (Special)

 

a)John (Jan) Amos Komensky (Comenius) (1592 - 1670), Moravian educational performer, teacher, administrator in Poland and Netherlands attempted to identify the developmental stages of learners and to match instruction to these stages. He also approached learning in a logical way, emphasized using concrete examples before abstract ideas including practical applications of what is taught. He believed that caring teachers should guide children’s learning. He wrote many textbooks and scientific papers on education, one of them being called “The World in Pictures” where he employed pictures as a teaching device. The value of Comenius’ creative work is hard to underestimate.

b ) John Locke (1632 - 1704), was an English philosopher and educator who inhibited the development of education. Lock’s major work was “An Essay Concerning Human Understanding”. This work determined the further development of educational policy. He claimed that the child is born clean like “tabula rasa” and receptive to education irrespective of its origin or background. According to Locke the prime concern for educationalists is to ensure physical development of a child as the basis of its intellectual development. He also stressed the importance of willpower in a personality.

c) JoanJacques Rousseau (1712 - 1778), French philosopher saw children as developing through stages. He believed that the child’s interests and needs should be the focus of a curriculum. Rousseau like Comenius believed in the method of instructing through the senses. According to him, the senses are more efficient and desirable than learning in the schoolroom. He had a romantic view on education.

d)Johann Heinrich Pestalozzi (1746 - 1827), the Swiss educator identified two levels of effective teachers. At the first level, teachers were taught to alleviate (облегчить) the special problems of poor students. According to him the school should resemble a loving home. At the second level, teachers should focus on learning through the senses.

e)Johann Herbart (1776 - 1841), the German philosopher and educator believed that the primary goal of education is moral education. Herbart was concerned with presenting to students the relationship among different subjects. His structured approach to curriculum encouraged careful lesson planning.

f)Emma Hart Willard (1787 - 1870), the American teacher committed her life to opening higher education to women. She was a pioneer in the struggle for women’s intellectual and legal rights.

g)Horace Mann (1796 - 1859), the American educator worked to improve the quality of education. He also worked to increase teacher salaries, to prepare better teachers. He established school libraries and encouraged the writing of textbooks that included practical social problems.

h)John Dewey (1859 - 1952), the American educator has been referred to as progressivism, pragmatism, and experimentalism. Children should learn how to structure their lives and develop self-discipline. Education consists of change and reconstructing experiences. He called for experimenting and trying out new methods. Dewey’s philosophy is also called instrumentalism.

i) Janusz Korchak (1876 - 1942) Polish educator, physician, writer beliefs were that children should be respected and listened to rather than shaped and trained according to the wants of adults.

j)A.S. Makarenko (1883 - 1939) A Ukrainian Soviet educator and writer, warden of two major youth colonies in the mid 1920 to the mid 1930, he is also the founder of Soviet pedagogy who elaborated the theory and methodology of upbringing. In 1933 he published the first part of “Pedagogicheskaia poema.”

 

15. Quiz. Match the names with the educators’ deeds, principles and beliefs.

1. John Locke A. worked as a forester
2. Horace Mann B. approached learning in a logical way
3. Jan Amos Komensky C. claimed that a child is receptive to education irrespective of its origin or background
4. Emma Hart Willard D. the primary goal of education is moral education
5. Johann Pestalozzi E. opened higher education to women
6. Friedrich Froebel F. worked to increase teacher salaries
7. Johann Herbart G. claimed that children should be respected
8. Janusz Korchak H. stated that school should resemble a loving home

 

Additional Activities: Miscellaneous

 


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