As a best-selling introductory education text, THOSE WHO CAN, TEACH, 12th Edition, maintains its current, dynamic, and reader-friendly approach to help students make informed decisions about entering the teaching profession. 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. Important Notice: Media content referenced within the product description or the product text may not be available in the ebook version.
Those who Can, Teach
Those Who Can, Teach: What It Takes to Make the Next Generation
When you enter a teacher education program, be sure to read THOSE WHO CAN, TEACH, 13E, International Edition. This book's state-of-the-art and reader-friendly approach will help you make an informed decision about becoming a teacher.
This book will challenge those biases, share the similarities and differences among those individuals and the rest of the population, promote inclusion and acceptance, and inspire the reader to be a better person to everyone, no matter the ...
This edition's highly acclaimed author team draws from current research and multiple sources to pose the question "Why Teach?
Using innovative statistical methods to track the professional lives of more than 50,000 college graduates, the book describes, in many cases for the first time, just how prospective, current, and former teachers respond to the incentives ...
Written by Singapore’s most prolific playwright Haresh Sharma, Those Who Can’t, Teach was first staged by The Necessary Stage in 1990 to critical acclaim.
The book's 6 units include easy to follow lesson plans, tips on how to teach the way students learn best, series of unique yarns to make phonics memorable, appendices of sounds, rules and words.
Harvard English professor Walter Jackson Bate—author of a Pulitzer Prize–winning biography of Samuel Johnson—was famous for crying each year at the lectern as he described Johnson's death; to one listener, it seemed as if Bate was ...
Filled with exceptional intellectual sophistication and necessary wisdom for the future of education."—Imani Perry, National Book Award Winner author of South To America An award-winning educator offers a much-needed antidote to ...