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American Educator - Summer 2007

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Critical Thinking
Why Is It So Hard to Teach?
By Daniel T. Willingham

There’s no such thing as critical thinking “skills.” There are strategies that aid critical thinking—but these can only take one’s thinking to the precipice, no further. Then what? Critical thinking depends on knowing relevant content very well—and thinking about it, repeatedly, in critical ways.

Web exclusive: You Probably Solved the Puzzle Based on Hansel and Gretel-Now Try This One Based on Chao Chong

Critical Thinking Programs:
Lots of Time, Modest Benefit

Did Sherlock Holmes Take a Course in Critical Thinking?

The Quest for Professional Voice
Why It Has Been—and Continues to Be—High on Our Teacher Union Agenda
By Leo Casey

Teacher unionism was never just about wages and working conditions. From the start, it has aimed at providing teachers with a voice on the professional and educational issues that drew them to teaching in the first place. Today teacher unions are key advocates of teacher quality and the conditions and standards that will promote teaching as a profession.

The Heart and Mind of a Teacher Unionist

Uncovering Academic Success
By Karin Chenoweth

What makes some schools so great? Journalist Karin Chenoweth visited more than a dozen high-scoring, regular public schools that enrolled large numbers of poor and minority children. The good news: They are not “soul-deadening test-prep factories.... where the teachers and principals were worn to a frazzle, burnt-out.... [or] robbed of all creativity.” She lays out what she found—and takes us inside one of those schools.

Inside Philadelphia’s M. Hall Stanton Elementary School
By Karin Chenoweth

A Place for Poetry
Together, Poetry and History Make Field Trips Memorable
By Anne Marie Whittaker

Educational tour designer Anne Marie Whittaker pairs U.S. monuments with her favorite poems. She shares her love of verse while taking her students back in time—and helping them see that there is a place for poetry in their lives, too.

 

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