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Classic Education at EduClassics.com describes behavior patterns people use to learn and uses of these descriptions to increase contributions of Classic Education in the 21st Century. This page includes definitions of folklore about education from a learners’ view. FOLKLORE about EDUCATION: (CU) a. Customs, beliefs, sayings, and practices about education that are not grounded in observable, objective, measurable ways that people learn; those anecdotes, experiences, and discussions about education not based on experimental empirical [[Behavioral Science |behavioral science] descriptions of learning. b. The written and unwritten culture of educators about education and learning, including about what is important in and for learning to occur in public schools. c. Practices of educators based on conventional wisdom rather than behavioral science descriptions of how people learn. d. The practice of teachers teaching, managing, and assessing each other, including but not limited to ways to act as a teacher in schools. e. The belief that educators know more about schools and learning than do other people. f. The belief and practice that failure of students to learn what the most informed people know and do rests beyond the duties of educators. g. The belief that public education exists as a voluntary rather than an imposed function of government sanctions, funding, and expectations. |
Highlights
Educators rely on folklore about education, not behavioral science descriptions of what learners do to learn. A relatively small number of educators have increasingly prepared most other educators with this folklore for teaching, administering, and conducting research about schools and schooling.
Educators consumed most of the preparation time referring to what they and others have done to teach and in other ways manage classrooms of students.
Most of that preparation has occurred without referring to the growing body of experimental empirical behavioral science descriptions of how people learn.
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Folklore about Education Lecture Notes
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