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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Elizabeth AshtonPublisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Weight: 0.400kg ISBN: 9781032119403ISBN 10: 1032119403 Pages: 162 Publication Date: 30 December 2022 Audience: College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , Tertiary & Higher Education , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsPart 1: THEORETICAL BACKGROUND 1. Theories of Child Development 2. Education: Perceptions of Purpose and their Results 3. Who Are the Children in Primary Schools? 4. The Role of Metaphor in Deepening Reflection 5. Learning Foundations: Symbols, Brain Hemispheres and Archetypal Images Part 2: CLASSROOM WORK 6. People via Symbols and Metaphors 7. Treasure Seeking and Shepherds 8. Images: Rocks and Stones 9. More Metaphors and Biblical Symbols: Drama and Drawings 10. Education – From Past and Present to the Future?ReviewsWhat the author shows so wonderfully and skilfully, is that when we really listen to children and their experiences we discover in them an immense ability to handle abstract ideas which is far greater than previous generations led us to believe was possible. This has significant implications for many - not least churches - in their work with children. I know I just want to Listen, Listen Listen. The Rt Revd Mark Bryant, Assistant Bishop Diocese of Newcastle, Acting Area Dean Bedlington Deanery, UK. Ashton's book is a very readable account by an experienced RE teacher of how 10-year olds can be encouraged to search for meaning in diverse forms of literary expression - drama, poetry and Biblical narratives that are often assumed to be beyond their comprehension. Readers of the book may find many useful tips for stimulating and broadening children's classroom experience of RE. Dr Olivera Petrovich, Research Fellow, Department of Experimental Psychology, Oxford University, UK. This is an important book which challenges much faulty thinking influencing education historically and up to the present day. It argues that the close relationship between chronological age and capacity for learning has been based on misplaced emphasis especially on Positivism and its latest progeny Scientism. In particular, children have been assumed to be literalists unable to appreciate other uses of language. Moreover, the attempt to reach objective knowledge of child development has from the beginning ignored what is essential, namely the unique experience and talents of each child. Instead of pursuing theories which satisfy adult enquiry, children themselves should be listened to. Ashton shares her experience of teaching in an area of great deprivation to refute those who deny the capacity of 10 year-old children to think abstractly and to understand metaphor. The evidence she presents cannot be lightly dismissed... Dr Brenda Watson, Retired Educational Consultant and former Director of the Farmington Institute, Oxford, UK. """What the author shows so wonderfully and skilfully, is that when we really listen to children and their experiences we discover in them an immense ability to handle abstract ideas which is far greater than previous generations led us to believe was possible. This has significant implications for many - not least churches - in their work with children. I know I just want to Listen, Listen Listen."" The Rt Revd Mark Bryant, Assistant Bishop Diocese of Newcastle, Acting Area Dean Bedlington Deanery, UK. ""Ashton’s book is a very readable account by an experienced RE teacher of how 10-year olds can be encouraged to search for meaning in diverse forms of literary expression – drama, poetry and Biblical narratives that are often assumed to be beyond their comprehension. Readers of the book may find many useful tips for stimulating and broadening children’s classroom experience of RE."" Dr Olivera Petrovich, Research Fellow, Department of Experimental Psychology, Oxford University, UK. ""This is an important book which challenges much faulty thinking influencing education historically and up to the present day. It argues that the close relationship between chronological age and capacity for learning has been based on misplaced emphasis especially on Positivism and its latest progeny Scientism. In particular, children have been assumed to be literalists unable to appreciate other uses of language. Moreover, the attempt to reach objective knowledge of child development has from the beginning ignored what is essential, namely the unique experience and talents of each child. Instead of pursuing theories which satisfy adult enquiry, children themselves should be listened to. Ashton shares her experience of teaching in an area of great deprivation to refute those who deny the capacity of 10 year-old children to think abstractly and to understand metaphor. The evidence she presents cannot be lightly dismissed..."" Dr Brenda Watson, Retired Educational Consultant and former Director of the Farmington Institute, Oxford, UK." Author InformationElizabeth Ashton became Lecturer in Religious and Moral Education at School of Education, Durham University, UK, following a teaching career in primary school classrooms of over nineteen years. She is now retired. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |