TY - BOOK AU - Holt,John Caldwell TI - Instead of education: ways to help people do things better SN - 1591810094 AV - LB 885 H758i 2004 U1 - 370 PY - 2004/// CY - Boulder, CO PB - Sentient Publications KW - Holt, John Caldwell, KW - Education KW - Philosophy KW - Educación KW - Filosofía. KW - Filosofía de la educación KW - Education, Compulsory KW - Enseñanza obligatoria N1 - Includes bibliographical references (p. [247]-250); Contents -- Introduction -- 1: Doing, not "education" -- 2: Myth of "learning" -- 3: Do-er schools vs educator schools -- 4: Resources for do-ers -- 5: More resources for do-ers -- 6: Sports resources -- 7: Do-ers and their t-eachers -- 8: More t-eacher at work -- 9: True authority of t-eachers -- 10: On human nature -- 11: One of the best s-chools -- 12: Failure of school reform -- 13: What s-chools are for -- 14: What all s-chools must teach -- 15: Obedient torturers -- 16: S-chools into s-chools -- 17: Why teach? -- 18: Do we have a chance? -- Appendices -- Selected bibliography N2 - Synopsis: John Holt, best-selling author of 10 pioneering books on alternative education, is widely credited with launching today's huge and still growing homeschooling movement. His original thinking and clear, thoughtful writing has emboldened countless parents to take the education of their children into their own hands. Instead of Education is Holt's most direct and radical challenge to the educational status quo and a clarion call to parents to save their children from schools of all kinds. In this breakthrough work Holt lays out the foundation for un-schooling as the vital path to self-directed learning and a creative life. It has become common knowledge that our educational system is in dire straights. Children graduate high school without knowing how to read; students are driven to violence by the brutal social climate of school; and with the ever-increasing demand for stricter discipline and higher standardized test scores, teachers have little time to convey their passion for their subject, if indeed any has survived. John Holt also makes the point that schools stifle children's creativity and individuality. In Instead of Education he gives us practical, innovative ideas for changing all that. He suggests creative ways to take advantage of the underused facilities we already have--such as holding classes that people really want on weekdays in churches and on weekends in schools. He gives lots of examples of educational programs that work and of people who self-educate in interesting ways. He describes actual non-compulsory schools, learning centers, and informal learning arrangements in action ER -