Democratic Discipline in Learning Communities

Theory and Practice

By (author) Clifford H. Edwards

Publication date:

16 January 2011

Length of book:

196 pages

Publisher

R&L Education

Dimensions:

241x163mm
6x9"

ISBN-13: 9781607099840

This book describes in detail the attributes of learning communities and how these characteristics help students acquire a sense of moral responsibility and commitment to fellow students. Clifford H. Edwards provides an account of how schools fail to satisfy student needs and thus promote discipline problems. Special attention is given to children's need for self-direction and how empowering them can promote more responsible learning involvement. There is also a focus on the factors that motivate learning and those that do not and how teachers can help their students become more intrinsically interested in school learning. Constructivist learning theory is presented as the most accepted explanation of how children learn and how it articulates with the learning community approach to education. The inquiry learning strategy is given as the most effective way to apply constructivist learning theory in classrooms. Appropriate relationships and effective communications are presented as essential components of learning communities and how they accentuate the effectiveness of this learning orientation. Democratic discipline within learning communities is described in detail.
Uncooperative students have always been the bane of the dedicated teacher. Many solutions have been put forward, from ancient times to the present, for solving the problems of the disruptive and uninterested student. Yet little has changed over the centuries. The student just doesn't want to learn in most classrooms. Why? The root of the problem has gone largely unresolved. True learning most effectively occurs when there is a proper match between the student's needs and the curricular operandi. Dr. Edwards offers the most effective solution to date in the conduct of a learning community wherein learning finds its optimum environment. Under such circumstances the cause of discipline problems is greatly reduced. The classroom can become a joy to student and teacher.