| Great for parents, teachers, and professors
unsigned online review
This
is the book on learning in the classroom that I've been waiting
for. So often, even interested students don't get what their
teacher wants. When this happens, they can lose confidence
in their native abilities and teachers become frustrated in
themselves and their students. With Gerald Graff's guidance,
teachers can now demistify their expectations while validating
their students' intelligence. While this book is directed
to teachers, parents will appreciate it as well and may want
to pass it on to their child's teachers. (Indeed, some goal-oriented
parents may find the chapter on writing an admission essay
worth the price of the book alone.)
Graff is an English professor, formerly of the University
of Chicago and now at the University of Illinois, Chicago.
He gained some fame in the early 1990s for arguing against
his then-U. Chicago colleague Allan Bloom's understanding
of Western culture. In this book, Graff looks into the great
chasm between students and teachers and finds on one side
Arguespeak, the language of teachers, and, on the other side,
Studentspeak, the language of everyone else. Arguespeak consists
of looking at particular aspects of a subject matter critically,
in light of what one knows about the whole field. Studentspeak
makes itself heard whenever people talk about everyday things:
friends, food, movies, work, video games, t.v. shows, and
so on. Problems arise when teachers want to hear Arguespeak
from their students but only get Studentspeak. Graff's book
offers concrete ways to help teachers teach their language
to students.
The main obstacle to understanding Arguespeak
is that every critical comment uttered by a teacher is made
within a larger conversation about a topic or subject. Teachers
make their judgements about, say, the historical significance
of the Magna Carta, or Twain's sense of irony, based on their
knowledge of what others in their field have to say about
these issues. Students rarely know how to formulate such judgements
because they are unaware of the conversation their teacher
is participating in. They are clueless.
But, their teachers are just as clueless about
helping them. Graff draws on the work of several education
theorists and compositionists (writing instructors) to offer
a commonsense way to align the expectations of students and
teachers without sacrificing achievement. First, teachers
must not feel compelled to teach everything--better to teach
a fewer number of topics in depth rather than treat the whole
range of a subject like a giant slalom course. Graff would
rather see teachers spend more time teaching their students
to think. Second, teachers must show students how to enter
the critical conversation of their subject by having them
practice with the conversations they participate in all the
time. Everyone has an opinion about something; everyone has
a topic they can think critically about. Graff recommends
using what kids already know, especially with regard to popular
culture, in class to develop their critical faculties. Graff
offers concrete ways to integrate students' nonacademic interests
with their academic responsibilities and get them on the road
to expressing their opinions in academically useful ways.
Following these measures in combination with the regular study
of the humanities, math, and sciences bridges the gap between
the students' way of thinking and their teachers' way of thinking.
To make things very clear, Graff even offers a template for
writing the standard five-paragraph critical essay. While
some may find this objectionable, I agree with Graff that
this kind of essay is a valuable pedagogical exercise. The
student doesn't sacrifice any originality if he's given a
structure within which to operate because he still has to
come up with his own ideas about the topic itself. I look
forward to using it in my own classes this year and expect
that this template will free up the students to express their
ideas in a more critical and engaging manner.
I can't overemphasize this book's practicality.
At all points, Graff has his eye on what actually goes on
in the classroom, on what the students are actually thinking
about and working on. I am certain that teachers, especially
at the high school and college levels, and parents will value
his insights.
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