Socratic Methods in the Classroom: Encouraging Critical Thinking and Problem Solving Through Dialogue
โ Scribed by Erick Wilberding
- Publisher
- Prufrock Press
- Year
- 2019
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 87
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Since the Renaissance, the Socratic Method has been adapted to teach diverse subjects, including medicine, law, and mathematics. Each discipline selects elements and emphases from the Socratic Method that are appropriate to teaching individuals or groups how to reason judiciously within that subject. By looking at some of the great practitioners of Socratic questioning in the past, Socratic Methods in the Classroom (grades 8โ12) explains how teachers may use questioning, reasoning, and dialogue to encourage critical thinking, problem solving, and independent learning in the secondary classroom. Through a variety of problems, cases, and simulations, teachers will guide students through different variations of the Socratic Method, from question prompts to the case method. Students will learn to reason judiciously, gain an understanding of important issues, and develop the necessary skills to discuss these issues in their communities.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
ebate holds enormous potential to build 21st century skills such as critical thinking, communication, collaboration, and conflict resolution in the K-12 classroom, but teachers often struggle to implement and contextualize it effectively. Using Debate in the Classroom draws on research from a variet
2nd Edition. โ Cambridge University Press, 2013. โ 354 p. โ ISBN: 978-1-107-60630-2<div class="bb-sep"></div>This lively coursebook encourages students to develop more sophisticated and mature thinking processes by learning specific, transferable skills independent of subject content which assist co
What is the Socratic method? How can we bring the Socratic method into the middle school and high school classroom? How does one lead a Socratic discussion? How does one develop the discussion skills of students? Using passages from the works of Plato and Xenophon, Teach Like Socrates answers each o
<p><span>This concise and accessible resource offers new college students, especially those in science degree programs, guidance on engaging successfully with the classroom experience and skillfully tackling technical or scientific questions. The author provides insights on identifying, from the out