Opening Minds
A Parents' Guide to Teaching for Thinking at Home
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- 33,99 €
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- 33,99 €
Description de l’éditeur
When schools, libraries, daycares, and playgrounds closed during the pandemic, children were forced to spend a lot of time at home. These closures left parents responsible for providing educational opportunities for their children to ensure they did not fall behind academically. Today, even with schools and other centers of learning reopened, it is clear that online, in-home learning is here to stay.
Opening Minds is a wonderful resource full of materials for parents of elementary and middle school children who want to expand their learning at home. Though it is not intended to replace or be a substitute for the standard curriculum of the grades, it provides parents with a variety of tools to promote and engage children’s thinking across various curriculum areas – critical thinking that can serve children at any grade level and give them a leg up to deal with whatever they will face.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Parents can "become teacher-surrogates in implementing the very essential work of continuing to open children's minds," writes education professor Wassermann (Evaluation Without Tears) in this comprehensive if dry guide to filling the gaps created by school shutdowns during the pandemic. She argues that "our long-term survival" may depend on children's ability to analyze, problem-solve, and innovate. In explaining how to engage and develop a child's critical thinking skills, she breaks down a dozen "thinking operations." Observing, for example, helps children make sense of the world, while comparing is a skill that leads to making better judgments. The heart of Wassermann's guidance comes in the form of hundreds of activities, grouped by reading ability: there's a list of questions to ask both pre-readers and middle grade students to help them form hypotheses, as well as lists of age-appropriate topics to compare, such as a bear and a pig for the younger group, and TV and radio for the older. Wassermann's delivery, though, often reads like a textbook ("Parents will need to instruct children orally about the nature of the operation"), and not all of her exercises seem likely to engage modern children, such as asking a child to put an onion in a dish and observe its growth. Still, at its best this an informative deep-dive into what makes children critical thinkers.