Bloomsbury CPD Library: Independent Learning
By (Author) John L. Taylor
Volume editor Sarah Findlater
By (author) Bloomsbury CPD Library
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Education
1st May 2018
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Education
Curriculum planning and development
Teacher training
Teaching skills and techniques
Educational strategies and policy
371.102
Paperback
192
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
310g
Independent learning is an ideal which many teachers aspire to but find difficult to achieve. It is common for school inspectors to comment on the need for students to learn more independently, and from higher education admissions officers and employers there is a constant call for students to be better equipped to be able to learn and think for themselves. Students themselves enjoy and benefit from lessons in which they are given the opportunity to begin to take charge of the learning process, particularly when there is space for them to explore and inquire into topics that grab their attention. At the same time, there is enormous pressure on schools to teach to the test, leading many teachers to feel that they have to play safe and cannot risk giving their students genuine responsibility for their own learning, lest results suffer. Critics also argue that students need to be taught directly, as the capacity for meaningful inquiry is not one that most students possess, and even when it is present, the open-ended nature of the inquiry process can make learning inefficient. In this book, John L. Taylor shows how the rhetoric about independent learning can be turned into a practical reality. The book explores the foundations of effective learning and demonstrates how it is possible to implement an approach to learning which encourages students to learn to think for themselves. It shows how by teaching students to think better, teachers can ensure that they both succeed in jumping assessment hurdles and also enjoy a richer, more meaningful educational experience.
John Taylor has produced a typically well-researched, thoughtful and, above all, practical guide to making classrooms hotbeds of independent learning. Tomorrows students will depend on their ability to think for themselves and we need teachers who can expertly help them. John brings all his experience to the challenge of independence without fear, and succeeds brilliantly. * David Price OBE, Director of Educational Arts, @DavidPriceOBE *
John L. Taylor is Assistant Head (Director of Learning, Teaching and Innovation) at Cranleigh School. Responsibility for the development of independent learning across the three schools in the Cranleigh Foundation. Working closely with staff, providing professional development opportunities and organizing and leading CPD in areas connected to independent learning. John is one of the principal architects of the Extended Project and other project-based qualifications in the UK. John published Think Again: A Philosophical Approach to Teaching in April 2012 (Continuum), plus 100 Ideas for Secondary Teachers: Philosophy and Ethics in 2014 (Bloomsbury). He has written blogs or features for the Guardian Teacher Network and the TES. He has extensive experience as a teacher trainer, providing regular INSET for schools and colleges on matters relating to independent learning, project work, the management of classroom discussion, teaching research and inquiry skills.