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Why Do I Need a Teacher When I've got Google?: The essential guide to the big issues for every teacher
Contributor(s): Gilbert, Ian (Author)
ISBN: 0415709598     ISBN-13: 9780415709590
Publisher: Routledge
OUR PRICE:   $47.45  
Product Type: Paperback - Other Formats
Published: June 2014
Qty:
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Education | Educational Psychology
- Education | Teaching Methods & Materials - General
- Education | Classroom Management
Dewey: 371.102
LCCN: 2013050745
Physical Information: 0.55" H x 5.5" W x 8.5" (0.68 lbs) 264 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:

Why do I need a teacher when I've got Google? is just one of the challenging, controversial and thought-provoking questions Ian Gilbert poses in this urgent and invigorating book.

Questioning the unquestionable, this fully updated new edition will make you re-consider everything you thought you knew about teaching and learning, such as:


- Are you simply preparing the next generation of unemployed accountants?
- What do you do for the 'sweetcorn kids' who come out of the education system in pretty much the same state as when they went in?
- What's the real point of school?
- Exams - So whose bright idea was that?
- Why 'EQ' is fast becoming the new 'IQ'.
- What will your school policy be on brain-enhancing technologies?
- Which is the odd one out between a hamster and a caravan?


With his customary combination of hard-hitting truths, practical classroom ideas and irreverent sense of humour, Ian Gilbert takes the reader on a breathless rollercoaster ride through burning issues of the twenty-first century, considering everything from the threats facing the world and the challenge of the BRIC economies to the link between eugenics and the 11+.


As wide-ranging and exhaustively-researched as it is entertaining and accessible, this book is designed to challenge teachers and inform them - as well as encourage them - as they strive to design a twenty-first century learning experience that really does bring the best out of all young people. After all, the future of the world may just depend on it