首页
登录
职称英语
The best way to learn is to teach. This is the message emerging from experim
The best way to learn is to teach. This is the message emerging from experim
游客
2023-10-14
24
管理
问题
The best way to learn is to teach. This is the message emerging from experiments in several schools in which teenage pupils who have problems at school themselves are tutoring younger children-with remarkable results for both sides.
According to American research, pupil tutoring wins "hands down" over computerized instruction and American teachers say that no other recent innovation has proved so consistently successful.
Now the idea is spreading in Britain. Throughout this term, a group of 14-year-olds at Trinity Comprehensive in Leamington Spa have been spending an hour a week helping children at a nearby primary school with their reading. The younger children read aloud to their tutors (who are supervised by university students of education) and then play word games with them.
All the 14-year-olds have some of their own lessons in a special unit for children who have difficulties at school. Though their intelligence is around average, most of them have fallen behind in reading, writing and maths and in some cases. This has led to truancy or bad behaviour in class.
Jean Bond, who is running the special unit, while on sabbatical from Warwick University’s education department, says that the main benefit of tutoring is that it improves the adolescents’ self-esteem. "The younger children come rushing up every time and welcome them. It makes the tutors feel important whereas, in normal school lessons, they often feel inadequate. Everyone benefits. The older children need practice in reading but, if they had to do it in their own classes, they would say it was kids’ stuff and be worried about losing face. The younger children get individual attention from very patient people. The tutors are struggling at school themselves, so when the younger ones can’t learn, they know exactly why. "
The tutors agree. "When I was little, I used to skive and say that I couldn’t do things when I really could," says Mark Greger. "The boy I’ve been teaching does the same. He says he can’t read a page of his book so I tell him that if he does do it, we can play a game. That works. "
The young children speak warmly of their new teachers. "He doesn’t shout like our teachers," says eight-year-old Jenny of her tutor, Cliff MeFarlane who, among his own teachers, has a reputation for being a handful. Yet Cliff sees himself as a tough teacher. "If they get a word wrong," he says, "I keep them at it until they get it right. "
Jean Bond, who describes pupil tutoring as an "educational conjuring trick", has run two previous experiments. In one, six persistent truants, aged 15 upwards, tutored 12 slow-learning infants in reading and maths. None of the six played truant from any of the tutoring sessions. "The degree of concentration they showed while working with their pupils was remarkable for pupils who had previously shown little ability to concentrate on anything related to schoolwork for any period of time," says Bond. The tutors became "reliable, conscientious caring individuals".
Their own reading, previously mechanical and monotonous, became far more expressive as a result of reading stories aloud to infants. Their view of education, which they had previously dismissed as "crap" and "a waste of time", was transformed. They became firmly resolved to teach their own children to read before starting school because, as one of them put it, "If they go for a job and they can’t write, they’re not going to employ you, are they?" The tutors also became more sympathetic to their own teachers’ difficulties, because they were frustrated themselves when the infants "mucked about".
In the seven weeks of the experiment, concludes Bond, "These pupils received more recognition, reward and feelings of worth than they had previously experienced in many years of formal schooling. " And the infants, according to their own teachers, showed measurable gains in reading skills by the end of the scheme. [br] The main reason that the young tutors make such successful teachers seems to be that ______.
选项
A、they enjoy being the centre Of attention
B、they know their pupils’ problems very well
C、they are never strict with their pupils
D、their pupils enjoy playing games with them
答案
B
解析
第五段最后一句谈到the young tutors知道他们学生的问题;第六段整段具体谈了这一点。依此可知选项B是the young tutors成功的主要原因。
转载请注明原文地址:https://tihaiku.com/zcyy/3096878.html
相关试题推荐
Allhertime_________experiments,shehasnotimeforsports.A、devotedtodoB、
WhatisthemessageconveyedintheUNscientificreport?[originaltext]AnewUn
What’stheaimofthemessagepublishedinnewspapers?[originaltext]Thepandemi
It______Samwhocalledanddidn’tleaveamessageontheansweringmachine.Hes
Inthisexperiment,theyarewakenedseveraltimesduringthenight,andaskedt
Onestudentskippedaclassandthensenttheprofessoranemailmessageask
Onestudentskippedaclassandthensenttheprofessoranemailmessageask
Onestudentskippedaclassandthensenttheprofessoranemailmessageask
Onestudentskippedaclassandthensenttheprofessoranemailmessageask
Onestudentskippedaclassandthensenttheprofessoranemailmessageask
随机试题
Whenaconsumerfindsthatanitemsheorheboughtisfaultyordoesnotli
[originaltext]W:Oh,Jack,I’mgladIcaughtyou.IwanttotellyouIhaveto
目前道琼斯指数中负有盛名的是“平均”系列价格指数,该系列包括()。A、道琼斯综合平均指数B、道琼斯公用事业平均指数C、道琼斯运输业平均指数D、道琼
设计单位交付设计资料及文件后,按规定收取设计费用所包含的应提供的相应的服务工作中
抗震设防区,高层房屋的桩箱或桩筏基础的埋深与房屋高度的比值,不宜小于下列中的哪一
手性药物的对映异构体之间的生物活性有时存在很大差别,下列药物中,一个异构体具有麻
A.囊肿位于根尖周围 B.囊壁的结缔纤维包膜内含有子囊 C.囊肿可分为球上颌
通过房地产估价活动分析、测算和判断出的特定价值或价格及提供的相关专业意见,称为(
A
百白破疫苗的初种年龄应自什么时候开始A.1个月 B.2个月 C.3个月 D
最新回复
(
0
)