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Moderna myter om lärande och utbildning

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I Moderna myter diskuteras dagens vanligaste myter om lärande och utbildning mot bakgrund av mytens sanningshalt och vad god forskning inom pedagogik och psykologi har att säga om den. Exempel på sådana myter sträcker sig från lärstilar, digitalisering i skolan, utbildningspolitik till myter om hur hjärnan fungerar och hur stora eller små klasser och skolor bör vara. Boken är skriven på ett konsist, humoristiskt och lättillgängligt sätt, men baseras på en omfattande empirisk forskning. I bokens avslutande del diskuteras varför dessa myter är så seglivade (med andra ord nästintill omöjliga att utplåna) och möjliga strategier att bekämpa dem.

Moderna myter är varken progressiv eller konservativ, den försöker bara tillrättalägga ett antal påståenden och presentera fakta på sätt som gör att de som är involverade i undervisning och utbildning kan förstå och använda sig av dem.

233 pages, Paperback

First published March 6, 2015

33 people are currently reading
398 people want to read

About the author

Pedro De Bruyckere

20 books9 followers

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5 stars
40 (34%)
4 stars
48 (41%)
3 stars
25 (21%)
2 stars
3 (2%)
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1 (<1%)
Displaying 1 - 18 of 18 reviews
Profile Image for Kiera.
115 reviews11 followers
March 30, 2023
it’s all short bits but even in the couple pages they spend talking about the topics, it’s really insightful. this is for sure a book all future educators should read!
151 reviews5 followers
June 30, 2019
This should be compulsory reading for all educators.

In short bite sized no nonsense language, this debunks many of the prevalent myths asking for hard evidence fact based assessment.

Utterly brilliant.
124 reviews53 followers
March 21, 2017
An extremely accessible summary of lots of results (or rather, non-results) that everybody who works in education in any capacity ought to know. Very well structured and full of pointers to further reading.
59 reviews2 followers
November 4, 2022
Data and research should be the staple of education.It kills me when I see the state of education and how little teachers actually know…
Profile Image for Duncan White.
143 reviews
October 18, 2019
I appreciate the work the authors of Urban Myths about Learning and Education are trying to accomplish. Myths regarding education have the potential to have a long-lasting negative impact on both students and society as a whole. Some of the myths discussed, like the idea that boys are better at math than girls, have the potential to be self-fulfilling, and the authors do a good job of making the dangers of these kinds of myths clear. Overall, however, I found that the book was crippled by what I would consider to be bad craft. The authors are consistently unable to effectively argue against the myths they are attempting to debunk.

The authors are often too reliant on their research to do all of the work for their arguments. The book is clearly well researched, with each myth having a dedicated source citation page accompanying the explanation. The problem is that the text debunking the arguments often becomes an extended summation of the research, and it's just not persuasive. The authors stated in their introduction that the book was intended for "everyone involved in and concerned about education," but they don't seem to know how to tailor their writing for a general audience.

I would say that the writing would be fine if the authors were writing for a strictly academic audience, but Urban Myths has other issues that keep me from saying that. It is frequently unclear what the authors are trying to debunk. The myth in question is the title of each section, but the text rarely elaborates on what that myth is. The section debunking the myth "We think most clearly when we are under pressure," is particularly bad. I would interpret that myth to be about an idea that a lot of students have, that they can procrastinate on their homework because they will flourish under the last minute pressures, the pressure-makes-diamonds philosophy of being a student. Instead, the author talks about how action movie heroes are able to win under pressure and argues about the long-term negative effects of too much stress. The ideas are related, but the argument that the author is making is entirely unpersuasive, being more geared against the idea that constant stress for students is good. Who the author is arguing against and why they felt the need to make the argument is left unclear.

The vagueness of the myths leads to a situation where the book seems to contradict itself. Another myth titled "The internet makes us dumber," concludes that the debate is still ongoing, though there is no evidence supporting the claim. One chapter later, the authors highlight an article that suggests that people are less willing to put in the work to read complex prose as a result of scanning and skimming the internet. These ideas are related and kind of contradict each other. Admitted, the authors specify that they have not yet evaluated the research behind the article, but it is a clearly related idea that may have been worth evaluating for the previous section. My assumption at this point is that the authors have a specific meaning in mind they use the word "dumber," but I don't know what it is, and that suggests a problem in the book's presentation of its arguments.

Urban Myths is at its best when it is discussing ongoing debates in the field of learning and education, when it doesn't feel the need to take a specific stance and can pit the opposing arguments against each other. The problem is that these sections are rare and the intended purpose of the book is to persuade us against myths about education and learning, something that it simply doesn't do well.
Profile Image for Jarda Kubalik.
211 reviews3 followers
December 17, 2018
Extremely useful to me, as a teacher. I confess to having fed some of the myths to people. Will be more careful...thanks.
Two things... 1. it applies strictly-science approach in places where it is not conceivably possible to measure or explain the issue by science, as I believe there are such areas in the practice of education. I know that that is the whole point of the book, but sometimes I felt it is just too tight. Second: If a myth clearly works in my classroom as placebo, then why not use it. In other words> education will always be full of myths, because it is more story telling than science.
Profile Image for Eric Kalenze.
Author 2 books17 followers
April 15, 2016
More like 4.5 stars, with the half-star subtracted because I was already familiar with most of the myths named in here.

That said, its clever format, convenient organization, and thorough referencing (by specific myth--handy!) will henceforth see it filed in my 'always-within-reach' stack. In all, a vital book for educators and education decision-makers.
Profile Image for C.S. Young.
Author 12 books5 followers
August 3, 2022
This is a book for everyone, not just educators. Challenging and insightful, the book dispels a number of pervasive myths. At least some of these I expect most people were taught at some point or believe. The author's knowledgeable analysis draws out the required nuance to understand oftentimes over simplified questions related to learning.
154 reviews
December 17, 2024
Largely disappointing. Featured a lot more editorializing than I expected (as opposed to a strict summary of the research), and did not convince me that the authors were experts so much as enthusiastic literature readers. The section on educational myths was interesting, the section on cognitive myths acceptable, and the remaining sections barely worth reading.
Profile Image for Mothwing.
969 reviews28 followers
September 19, 2023
Popular urban legends that all teachers have encountered before tend not to be true, here are some explanations why.

I saw Paul Kirschner speak at a conference this year and he is an impressive speaker.
Profile Image for Dena.
273 reviews1 follower
November 22, 2017
Informative look at educational trends and the fact that charisma less than research often influences the public.
Profile Image for Nic.
226 reviews4 followers
June 3, 2019
Very clearly written and does not contain any complicated jargon. Each section is concisely written and seems to be for busy teachers who want to read between teaching periods.
Profile Image for Lachlan Ferguson.
83 reviews
March 28, 2023
A very detailed and interesting set of educational myths that all teachers should read.

I definitely had a few perspectives modified or enhanced based on this text.
Profile Image for Barb. D..
318 reviews
October 16, 2023
Good summary, informative, of course naturally a little outdated in places, but great revision of things already known.
Profile Image for Mahadi B.
15 reviews1 follower
November 13, 2020
I totally enjoyed reading this book. I struggled so much during college, and beside prolonged studying and true desire to learn, my grades always weren't from the nicest. By reading this book, I gained more insights and learned a lot of useful things - all of which is based on evidence. I think everyone should read it, because you always are going to be associated with learning, whether it be yourself, your siblings, kids, etc. Easily 5/5.
Profile Image for Lindzi.
430 reviews
October 19, 2019
Hade hoppats på ännu fler myter som kommunpolitiker och skolledare håller levande.
Displaying 1 - 18 of 18 reviews

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