Synopses & Reviews
As the best-selling introductory education text, Those Who Can, Teach, 11/e, maintains its current, dynamic, and reader-friendly approach to help students make informed decisions about entering teacher education programs. Using multiple sources, including biographies, narratives, profiles, and interviews with top educators and scholars, the text promotes student interaction and exposes students to the realities of teaching. This acclaimed author team's direct, conversational tone invites students to reflect on the problems and satisfactions of teaching in the United States, casting a career in teaching as a positive challenge.
Review
"What I like most about the text is its subtle yet ever-present focus upon the future teachers' dispositions, while providing them with the foundations of the discipline itself. I strive to create a learner-centered classroom; Ryan and Cooper have succeeded in creating a learner-centered text."
Synopsis
'This dynamic, reader-friendly text helps students make informed decisions about entering teacher education programs. The authors use multiple sources, including biographies and dialogues, to increase student interest and involvement with the material, and encourage students to regard becoming a teacher a positive challenge.'
About the Author
Kevin Ryan, Ph.D., Stanford University, is Professor Emeritus of Education at Boston University School of Education. He is also the founding director of the Center for Character and Social Responsibility. A former high school English teacher, Dr. Ryan was a tenured faculty member at the University of Chicago and the Ohio State University before moving to Boston University. In 1970 Ryan was granted an Alfred North Whitehead Fellowship at Harvard University. Since then he received the Boston University Scholar-Teacher Award, the National Award of Distinction by the University of Pennsylvania Graduate School of Education, and the Paideia Society's Award for Educational Excellence. Ryan has written and edited 22 books and over 100 articles on teacher and character education. He is also the author of TEACHING FOR STUDENT LEARNING: BECOMING A MASTER TEACHER (with James M. Cooper, ©2012, Cengage); THOSE WHO CAN, TEACH, 14th Edition (with James M. Cooper and Cheryl Bolick, ©2016, Cengage); and the editor of KALEIDOSCOPE: CONTEMPORARY AND CLASSIC READINGS IN EDUCATION, 13th Edition (with James Cooper, © 2012, Cengage). James M. Cooper is Professor Emeritus from the Curry School of Education at the University of Virginia, where he served as Commonwealth Professor of Education (1984-2004) and Dean of the School (1984-1994). As Dean of the Curry School of Education, he led the initiative to restructure the teacher education program, moving to an innovative five-year program that integrates the study of arts and sciences, professional education, and field experiences. In addition, he has authored, co-authored, or edited over 60 book chapters, journal articles, monographs, and books, including TEACHING FOR STUDENT LEARNING: BECOMING A MASTER TEACHER (with Kevin Ryan, © 2012, Cengage); THOSE WHO CAN, TEACH, 14th Edition (with Kevin Ryan and Cheryl Bolick, © 2016, Cengage); KALEIDOSCOPE: CONTEMPORARY AND CLASSIC READINGS IN EDUCATION, 13th Edition (with Kevin Ryan, © 2012, Cengage), and CLASSROOM TEACHING SKILLS (©2014, Cengage), for which he served as editor and one of the authors. He is also series editor of the Educator's Guide series (Cengage). His books and articles address the areas of teacher education, supervision of teachers, case studies in teacher education, and technology and teacher education. Cooper has also received many honors, including a Fulbright-Hays Award for Lecturing in Portugal and recognition as one of the nation's Distinguished Teacher Educators from the Association of Teacher Educators.
Table of Contents
Note: Each chapter concludes with A Final Word. I. Schools and Students 1. Why Teach? Examining Your Motives for Teaching The Rewards of Teaching Sources of Useful Experience Case Studies in the Motivation to Teach 2. What Is a School and What Is It For? Education and Schooling Schools as Cultures Schools as Transmitters or Re-Creators of Culture Four Basic Purposes of School What Do Studies Reveal About the Nature of Schools What Is a Good School? The Unfinished Work of the Schools 3. Who Are Today's Students in a Diverse Society? Sources of Student Diversity Racial, Ethnic and Cultural Diversity English Language Learners Diverse Abilities Diverse Needs Gender Sexual Orientation The Teacher's Response to Diversity 4. What Social Problems Affect Today's Students? Recognizing Risk Factors New American Family Patterns Poverty Teenage Parenting Abused and Neglected Children Alcohol and Drug Abuse Adolescent Suicide School Violence and Vandalism School Dropout Rates 5. What Is Taught? What Is the Curriculum? What Is the Present Curriculum? Assessing Student Academic Performance Additional Influences on Curriculum Is the Existing Curriculum Relevant to Today's Society? II. Teachers 6. What Makes a Teacher Effective? Framework for Professional Practice The Teacher as a Reflective Decision Maker Aspects of Reflective Decision Making What Attitudes Does the Effective Teacher Posses? What Subject-Matter Knowledge Does the Effective Teacher Need? What Theoretical Knowledge Does the Effective Teacher Need? Personal Practical Knowledge What Teaching Skills are Required of an Effective Teacher? 7. What Should Teachers Know About Technology and Its Impact on Schools? A Brief Look at Education's Technological Past How Are Schools Being Pressured to Change? How Are Technologies Affecting Student Learning How Are Technologies Affecting Teaching? How Are Computer Technologies Organized for Student Use? What Are the Key Issues in Educational Technology? 8. What Are the Ethical and Legal Issues Facing Teachers? The Ethics of Teaching The Teacher and the Law Lifestyle and the Teacher Law, Religion, and the School Students and the Law III. Foundations and the Future 9. What Are the Philosophical Foundations of American Education? What Is Philosophy? The Terrain of Philosophy Schools of Educational Philosophy The Influence of Psychological Theories Your Philosophy of Education 10. What Is the History of American Education? Themes in American Education Elementary Education Secondary Education Private Education Education of Minorities 11. How Are Schools Governed, Influenced, and Financed? Who Legally Governs Public Education? Who Influences American Public Education? How Are Schools Financed? 12. How Should Education Be Reformed? What Ought to Be the Elements of Educational Reform? Current Reform Initiatives The Current State of School Reform IV. The Teaching Profession 13. What Are Your Job Options in Education? Will There Be Job Openings in Education? How Do You Obtain a Teaching Position? How Do You Become Licensed? If You Don't Teach, What Then? 14. What Can the New Teacher Expect? The School Milieu: The Shock of the Familiar Administrators: Mixed Bag and Many Hats Peers: A Mixed Blessing Instruction: So Much to Learn Students: Friends or Fiends? Parents: Natural Allies with Different Agendas Surviving the First Year of Teaching 15. What Does It Mean to Be a Professional? The Status of Teaching: A Profession or Not? Professional Associations Your Own Professional Development 16. Why Teach? A Final Word Opinions About Teaching Why Teachers Teach