How to Teach by George Drayton Strayer;Naomi Norsworthy
page 58 of 326 (17%)
page 58 of 326 (17%)
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4. In what sense is it possible to attend to two things at the same
time? 5. Why are children less able to concentrate their attention than are most adults? 6. Will a boy or girl in your class be more or less easily distracted as he gives free attention or forced attention to the work in hand? 7. What educational value is attached to an exercise which requires that a boy sit at his desk and work, even upon something in which he is not very much interested, for twenty minutes? 8. In what sense is it true that we form the habit of concentrating our attention? 9. Why is it wrong to extend a lesson beyond the period during which children are able to concentrate their attention upon the work in hand, or beyond the period during which they do concentrate their attention? 10. How is it possible to extend the period devoted to a lesson in reading, or in geography, or in Latin, beyond the time required to read a story or draw a map, or translate a paragraph? 11. Why is it possible to have longer recitation periods in the upper grades and in the high school than in the primary school? 12. Give examples from your class work of free attention; of forced attention; of free derived attention. |
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