




How Children Fail (Classics in Child Development) [Holt, John] on desertcart.com. *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. How Children Fail (Classics in Child Development) Review: Great Book - Worth your money and time. Thought provoking. Great read. Review: I recommend getting this book over How Children Learn - I recommend getting this book over How Children Learn, which is great but not as good. This book is phenomenal, life changing, one of the best books I've ever read (I'm an avid reader) and THE BEST anti school book out there. I worried this book would be irrelevant in today's era, but no it is spot on. The author provides plenty of examples to illustrate his thoughts. It all makes sense and everyone should read this before having kids. I wish I had. If you have any doubts or fears about homeschooling, unschooling, whatever you call it, then you especially need this book. Even if you don't have kids, this book is enlightening. I'd recommend everyone read it, but if you have kids or work with them, consider this book mandatory. It will help you understand children in ways you've never thought of.
| Best Sellers Rank | #183,609 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #158 in Parenting & Family Reference #194 in Educational Psychology (Books) #234 in Philosophy & Social Aspects of Education |
| Customer Reviews | 4.6 4.6 out of 5 stars (324) |
| Dimensions | 8.58 x 5.45 x 0.8 inches |
| Edition | Revised |
| ISBN-10 | 0201484021 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-0201484021 |
| Item Weight | 12 ounces |
| Language | English |
| Print length | 320 pages |
| Publication date | September 4, 1995 |
| Publisher | Balance |
N**1
Great Book
Worth your money and time. Thought provoking. Great read.
C**L
I recommend getting this book over How Children Learn
I recommend getting this book over How Children Learn, which is great but not as good. This book is phenomenal, life changing, one of the best books I've ever read (I'm an avid reader) and THE BEST anti school book out there. I worried this book would be irrelevant in today's era, but no it is spot on. The author provides plenty of examples to illustrate his thoughts. It all makes sense and everyone should read this before having kids. I wish I had. If you have any doubts or fears about homeschooling, unschooling, whatever you call it, then you especially need this book. Even if you don't have kids, this book is enlightening. I'd recommend everyone read it, but if you have kids or work with them, consider this book mandatory. It will help you understand children in ways you've never thought of.
G**N
I had already fallen in love with the idea of unschooling
I don't know where to start. This book changed me on a fundamental level. It started kind of slow for me, but by the end my understanding of children, learning, and school were forever changed. I read this book eleven years ago when my oldest was an infant. I had already fallen in love with the idea of unschooling, although I didn't truly understand it back then. I didn't make significant progress in deschooling until my oldest was about 8 or 9. The longer I unschool and deschool, the more this book speaks to me. John Holt understood how children fail, and he did a brilliant job of slowly unpacking that knowledge in the form of this book so the rest of us could not help but see it, at least those of us who want to see it. Start with this book first. Then read all of Holt's other books. You're perspective on children and learning will be more rooted in reality.
L**R
Insightful
Having studied education and seen first hand the detrimental affect teacher-centered classes have on a child's potential, I have to say it's refreshing to read a THINKING person's view on pedagogy in the 20th century. Sadly, I'm not sure we've improved much in the close to 50 years since this book/journal was written. Though the journal thoughts in the first part of the book show the direction Holt's thinking is leaning, the section on "Real Learning" is where the real gems are to be found. In fact, it has spurred me on to purchase "How Children Learn" as my preference is to approach education positively and constructively. This is a definite classic and I think new educators as well as old should be encouraged to read it and use to rethink their approach to teaching.
J**K
Must Read for All Teachers
This book is a must read for all teachers and parents. John Holt provides great insight into how kids respond to schooling which must be distinguished from genuine education. Schooling consists of pointless dull and often stressful rituals that children develop various strategies to cope with. Testing, grading, and judging students creates a fear of failure in children that becomes a self-fulfilling prophesy for far too many. For Holt, real learning is the work of the learner not the teacher.
R**N
A must for parents
See my comments for Holt's other book, "How Children Learn". Kids in public schools are forced to learn (memorize) things that have no relevance to them. One might say to a child, "You better learn this, and get it right on a test." The child is pressured to give the correct answer, or even any answer out of fear of being punished or humiliated. Holt, "What is most surprising of all is how much fear there is in school". Look at my review of "How Children Learn", which is also a must have book for parents.
M**V
Great price
Very cheap and good quality print
R**4
Or: How Schools Prevent Learning
What is it about? Mostly it’s about how children cope with the stress of school, and how these methods are not conducive to real learning. Was it good? It was relatable and felt true, but I did not care for the fact that it was a bunch of memos he had written before he ever thought to write a book. As such, it is not nearly as fluent and organized as some of his other books.
A**R
Anyone serious about child education in real sesnse must read especially all teachers , how we destroy kids abilities to learn has been well explained. John passion amd love for kids comes out thorough like the way god loves us all
C**C
I wanted to learn more about the ideas underpinning the idea ofv 'unschooling'. John Holts observations and thoughts on how smart children are, and how we/the education system conditions them to feel/believe anything but rang true to me. Great, accessible read. As a relatively new father, I'm glad I read this book.
K**R
An eye opener. Everything in it makes sense and I didn't realise until my 4th child struggled with the school system. I now know why!
R**R
A very interesting book! I would recommend that to teachers and parents to read. Absolutely useful book! Especially for teachers.
A**R
Thanks
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