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In cooperative learning, you have a purposeful, meaningful, and authentic context in which children can sharpen their communicative skills.
Lilian Katz
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Lilian Katz
Age: 54
Academic
Lilian Gonshaw Katz
Authentic
Context
Meaningful
Skills
Communicative
Learning
Sharpen
Children
Purposeful
Cooperative
Cooperatives
More quotes by Lilian Katz
Communicative skills develop when there's something meaningful for children to communicate about-when they are taking an active role.
Lilian Katz
In both cooperative learning and project work, the teacher encourages children to talk to one another. This helps them pay attention to each other's efforts and ideas. Children take to these kinds of exchanges very readily, but the teacher really needs to encourage this interaction.
Lilian Katz
Curriculum should help children make deeper and fuller understanding of their own experience
Lilian Katz
Experts generally agree that taking all opportunities to read books and other material aloud to children is the best preparation for their learning to read. The pleasures of being read to are far more likely to strengthen a child's desire to learn to read than are repetitions of sounds, alphabet drills, and deciphering uninteresting words.
Lilian Katz
When children are truly involved in the scientific process they gain understanding, knowledge, and life skills. They deepen their awareness of what's going on around them and how others contribute to their well-being.
Lilian Katz
When a teacher tries to teach something to the entire class at the same time, chances are, one-third of the kids already know it one-third will get it and the remaining third won’t. So two-thirds of the children are wasting their time.
Lilian Katz
Learning to deal with setbacks, and maintaining the persistence and optimism necessary for childhood's long road to mastery are the real foundations of lasting self-esteem.
Lilian Katz
Children involved in project work are encouraged to serve the group needs and share responsibility for what's accomplished.
Lilian Katz
Young children are unlikely to have their self-esteem strengthened from excessive praise or flattery. On the contrary, it may raise some doubts in children many children can see through flattery and may even dismiss an adult who heaps on praise as a poor source of support-one who is not very believable.
Lilian Katz