E-Book Overview
This cheerful and accessible book is packed with direct and straightforward advice drawn from the author’s extensive and successful personal experience as teacher-trainer, teacher and examiner. It sets out clear and practical guidelines to support your training and enhance your teaching, moving you directly towards a real understanding of how and why pupils learn and of how you can enhance your own progress. It also offers reassurance and support with the difficulties which you might encounter through your training as a teacher. Why won’t Year 8 actually do anything? Why do we have to read all this theory? I know my pace and timing need improvement, but what do I actually do about it? Why haven’t I moved forward at all in the last four weeks? It does this by: outlining strategies for organization exploring issues of personal development demystifying areas often seen as difficult or complex providing achievable and practical solutions directly addressing anxieties. Although a practical book, at its heart lie essential principles about good teaching and learning. It is anecdotal and readable, and may be dipped into for innovative lesson ideas or read from cover-to-cover as a short, enjoyable course which discovers exciting teaching principles in successful, practical experience. The book is ideal for secondary trainee teachers, but the underlying principles about what makes a brilliant trainee teacher are applicable to primary trainees too.
E-Book Content
H o w to be a B ri l l i an t Tr ain e e Te ac her
This cheerful and accessible book is packed with direct and straightforward advice drawn from the author’s extensive and successful personal experience as teacher-trainer, teacher and examiner. It sets out clear and practical guidelines to support your training and enhance your teaching, moving you directly towards a real understanding of how and why pupils learn and of how you can enhance your own progress. It also offers reassurance and support with the difficulties which you might encounter through your training as a teacher. Why won’t Year 8 actually do anything? Why do we have to read all this theory? I know my pace and timing need improvement, but what do I actually do about it? Why haven’t I moved forward at all in the last four weeks? It does this by: • • • • •
outlining strategies for organisation; exploring issues of personal development; demystifying areas often seen as difficult or complex; providing achievable and practical solutions; directly addressing anxieties.
Although a practical book, at its heart lie essential principles about good teaching and learning. It is anecdotal and readable, and may be dipped into for innovative lesson ideas or read from cover-to-cover as a short, enjoyable course which discovers exciting teaching principles in successful, practical experience. The book is ideal for secondary trainee teachers, but the underlying principles about what makes a brilliant trainee teacher are applicable to primary trainees too. Trevor Wright, University of Worcester, has been a successful teacher for about thirty years, and a trainer of teachers for about ten years. Ofsted inspectors describe his school teaching as ‘uncommon, exemplary, extraordinarily effective’. His postgraduate teacher-trainees consistently evaluate their training as ‘superb’ and ‘inspirational’. His experiences as both teacher and teacher-trainer allow him to bridge the gap between principle and practice on a day-to-day basis.
Al s o b y Tre v o r Wr i gh t :
H o w t o be a Bri l l i a n t E n g l i s h Te a c he r
How t o be a B r illia n t Tr ai n ee Te ache r
Trevor Wri g ht I llust r a t ed b y Sh a u n H u g h e s
First published 2008 by Routledge 2 Park Square, Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon OX14 4RN Simultaneously published in the USA and Canada by Routledge