Aristotle on Teaching
By (Author) Mary Michael Spangler
University Press of America
University Press of America
20th August 1998
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
371.102
Paperback
244
Width 152mm, Height 229mm, Spine 25mm
454g
Aristotle on Teaching examines teaching in general, and analyzes the objects, procedures, and order found in all student learning, furnishing the guidelines for the culminating section on the inductive and deductive procedures underlying all teaching. It explores Aristotle's doctrine to discover its relevance for the art of teaching, defined as the act of explaining the truth to those being taught, through the lucid explanations of Thomas Aquinas on the writings of Aristotle.
The book is divided into three sections, the first giving a general examination of the definition, purpose, materials, and procedure of teaching. It then discusses the student's natural procedure for acquiring knowledge by first treating the objects of knowledge, and then the procedure by which the student understands them. The third section examines the instructor's method of teaching, which is twofold because of the need to be patterned after the student's natural manner of acquiring knowledge.
It can, that is, serve as a guide for clarifying some questions...and for supplementing and enriching our knowledge of what formally a person is doing when he teaches another. -- Fr. Alfred Wilder, O.P. * Recensiones *
"It can, that is, serve as a guide for clarifying some questions...and for supplementing and enriching our knowledge of what formally a person is doing when he teaches another." -- Fr. Alfred Wilder, O.P. * Recensiones *
Mary Michael Spangler, O.P. is Professor of Education and Philosophy at Ohio Dominican College and is the editor of Metaphysics of Aquinas (University Press of America, 1996) and Faith Views of the Universe (University Press of America, 1997).