Essay On Perfect Classroom

1090 Words3 Pages

A Perfect Classroom An ideal problem-posing class can be favorable in different ways for both students and teachers, who wants to adapt a more proficient way of learning. It allows students to be at liberty to think critically about what the teacher is teaching, and to debate with knowledgeable response. Also, it can create a relationship between both the students and teachers, by making the students feel a sense of comfort and desire to learn. Not to mention, this can be a learning experience that allows not only the students, but the teachers gets to learn something new as well. To start off, this concept gives students the opportunity to analyze the lesson or information given by the teacher. This breaks the traditional habits of learning, …show more content…

With this, the students will be more eager to speak in depth about the lesson or ask questions. When students are interacting more, this causes less of a frustration from the teacher and they are more willing to spend time with the students to make sure they comprehend the lesson being taught, and that they are able to critically think about it. Thus, it enables both the students and the teachers to overcome their titles, where no one is higher than or less than the other. However, although there is a bond between the teacher and the student, it is important that a boundary is set, and not to be crossed by either one. They must remain respectable to each other, and to understand that not everyone thinks the same. The purpose of this relationship is for the teachers to increase the students ' desire to learn. With regards to this, in a non-oppressive classroom, students can expect to get assignments from the teachers that requires them to think critically. By way of example, an English teacher might give the students an end of year exam, where a few of the questions are asking students to think critically and write in debt about what the questions are asking. Similarly, in a Math class, a teacher might give a student an equation and would ask for the student 's feedback explaining …show more content…

In most classes that I 've been in, the class sizes were between twenty five to thirty students, so the teacher or professor would always hurry to teach us and provide us all with information, without making sure that we all understood the lesson that was given. They failed to realize, that we were not critically thinking about the lesson. Sadly, I too can say that I have been so accustomed to this concept of learning, that throughout my schooling, I was never actually challenged to think critically, I would usually guess what I thought would be the right answer to an equation or an assignment, and instead of actually thinking about what the answer is or why it should be correct, I would depend on my memory rather than reason. The traditional way of education has been force feeding us students with information. Although the teachers cannot wait for students to engage in critical thinking, they should still inspire us to become partners to build a teacher-student relationship, instead of only giving us assignments without explaining why they are necessary or how they can benefit us in the real

Open Document