What's the Point of School? Quotes

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What's the Point of School?: Rediscovering the Heart of Education What's the Point of School?: Rediscovering the Heart of Education by Guy Claxton
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What's the Point of School? Quotes Showing 1-8 of 8
“In a complicated, fast-changing world the intelligent path is to let go of being a Knower and embrace being a Learner.”
Guy Claxton, What's the Point of School?: Rediscovering the Heart of Education
“If we want young people to develop the habits of thinking for themselves, using their imagination, being open to new ideas, saying when they don’t understand, and exploring real challenges together, then they have to see their teachers doing the same thing.”
Guy Claxton, What's the Point of School?: Rediscovering the Heart of Education
“Children’s success in life depends not on whether they can read, but on whether they do”
Guy Claxton, What's the Point of School?: Rediscovering the Heart of Education
“the difference between constantly feeling you have to prove yourself, and feeling free to improve yourself.”
Guy Claxton, What's the Point of School?: Rediscovering the Heart of Education
“Damasio has shown that, without emotion and intuition, reason easily becomes detached from practical intelligence, and produces intellectually clever people who behave stupidly. From a functional point of view, emotions are general states of readiness to deal with broad kinds of threats and dilemmas. Fear is readiness to flee; anger is readiness to intimidate; sadness is readiness to withdraw and mourn; and ‘interest’ and ‘intrigue’ are the feelings that signal readiness to learn. Without some kind of emotional engagement, learning is slow and weak.”
Guy Claxton, What's the Point of School?: Rediscovering the Heart of Education
“Martin Hughes found that four-year-olds were perfectly happy to tell you that ‘two plus three’ equal ‘five’, and were even quite willing to say that ‘two wuggles and three wuggles’ make ‘five wuggles’, without having a clue what a wuggle was. But they refused to add ‘two thousands and three thousands’ because, they said, ‘we haven’t done thousands yet’. By four years of age they had already learned that maths was a very special and precarious world where you had to tread carefully, and had to wait to be ‘taught’ before you could move.99”
Guy Claxton, What's the Point of School?: Rediscovering the Heart of Education
“It is the kind of learning you are practising that is important, not the subject-matter you are practising on.”
Guy Claxton, What's the Point of School?: Rediscovering the Heart of Education
“If real-world, useful knowledge is a provisional, human construction, why on earth do we lead children to believe otherwise? Why do we keep acting as if studying knowledge for its own sake, in a lacklustre, reverential kind of way, is an important thing to do, without feeling the need to explain what such study is equipping them to do (other than pass exams)? Why do schools trundle on, teaching past participles and the Vikings, as if oblivious to the fact that their students are going to graduate into a knowledge-making world, not a knowledge-applying one? Why do we not revel in showing them all the skills, doubts, conversations and controversies that are the stuff of knowledge-making – and help them get better at doing these knowledge-making things for themselves?”
Guy Claxton, What's the Point of School?: Rediscovering the Heart of Education