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  3. Alfie Kohn
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Students get the message bout what adults want. When 4th graders in a variety of classroomswere asked what their teachers most wanted them to do, they didn't say, "Ask thoughtful questions" or "Make responsible decisions" or Help others." They said, "Be quiet, don't fool around, and get our work done on time.

em Punished by Rewards: The Trouble with Gold Stars, Incentive Plans, A's, Praise and Other Bribes
children education rewards

Many of our elected officials have virtually handed the keys to our schools over to corporate interests. Presidential commissions on education are commonly chaired by the executives of large companies.

em The Schools Our Children Deserve: Moving Beyond Traditional Classrooms and "Tougher Standards"
school children education parenting going-beyond non-traditional homeschooling

The more we want our children to be (1) lifelong learners, genuinely excited about words and numbers and ideas, (2) avoid sticking with what’s easy and safe, and (3) become sophisticated thinkers, the more we should do everything possible to help them forget about grades.

school learning kids education parenting

Like any other tool for facilitating the completion of a questionable task, rewards offer a "how" answer to what is really a "why" question.

em Punished by Rewards: The Trouble with Gold Stars, Incentive Plans, A's, Praise and Other Bribes
business parenting rewards

How well you do things should be incidental, not integral, to the way you regard yourself.

em The Myth of the Spoiled Child: Coddled Kids, Helicopter Parents, and Other Phony Crises
self-esteem parenting

My advice is to make a point of apologizing to your child about something at least twice a month. Why twice a month? I don't know. It sounds about right to me. (Almost all the specific advice in parenting books is similarly arbitrary. At least I admit it.)

em Unconditional Parenting: Moving from Rewards and Punishments to Love and Reason
parenting

Good tennis players are those who beat other tennis players, and a good shot during play is one the opponent can't return. But that's not a truth about life or excellence -- it's a truth about tennis. We've created an artificial structure in which one person can't succeed without doing so at someone else's expense, and then we accuse anyone who prefers other kinds of activities of being naive because "there can be only one best -- you're it or you're not," as the teacher who delivered that much-admired you're-not-special commencement speech declared. You see the sleight of hand here? The question isn't whether everyone playing a competitive game can win or whether every student can be above average. Of course they can't. The question that we're discouraged from asking is why our games are competitive -- or our students are compulsively ranked against one another -- in the first place.

em The Myth of the Spoiled Child: Coddled Kids, Helicopter Parents, and Other Phony Crises
parenting competition

Historians have shown that "parents in the Middle Ages worried about their kids no less than we worry about ours today," and by the nineteenth century there is evidence of bars being placed on windows to protect toddlers from falling out as well as "leading strings so that young children wouldn't wander off during walks.

em The Myth of the Spoiled Child: Coddled Kids, Helicopter Parents, and Other Phony Crises
parenting spoiled-children

How we feel about our kids isn't as important as how they experience those feelings and how they regard the way we treat them.

em Unconditional Parenting: Moving from Rewards and Punishments to Love and Reason
parenting

In short, with each of the thousand-and-one problems that present themselves in family life, our choice is between controlling and teaching, between creating an atmosphere of distrust and one of trust, between setting an example of power and helping children to learn responsibility, between quick-fix parenting and the kind that's focused on long-term goals.

em Unconditional Parenting: Moving from Rewards and Punishments to Love and Reason
parenting

People will typically be more enthusiastic where they feel a sense of belonging and see themselves as part of a community than they will in a workplace in which each person is left to his own devices

em Punished by Rewards: The Trouble with Gold Stars, Incentive Plans, A's, Praise and Other Bribes
community business-culture

But as I mastered the material, homework ceased to be necessary. A no homework policy is a challenge to me," he adds. "I am forced to create lessons that are so good no further drilling is required when the lessons are completed.

em The Homework Myth: Why Our Kids Get Too Much of a Bad Thing
educational educational-philosophy

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