Children, at this age, are likely to take the words of a parent or teacher at face value, and naturally parrot it back. This may be a hard habit to break.
I’m not sure that third grade is an appropriate time to try to break that habit. That’s an age where at least some of the students are probably still in the preoperational stage. Kids naturally start to question adults’ reasoning more when they develop the capacity to manage those sorts of thoughts effectively.
Teaching students to grasp a complex topic will generally require walking them through various stages of simplification. Most third graders are probably still in the process of developing the foundational skills that they’ll eventually need in order to effectively learn complex topics without guessing the teacher’s password.
Most third graders are probably still in the process of developing the foundational skills that they’ll eventually need in order to effectively learn complex topics without guessing the teacher’s password.
But then they don’t, so we need to try another method, yes?
We need to do something differently, but we need to make the right changes at the right places. If you want kids to better understand rationality when they grow up, you don’t want to start by teaching them things like the content of the Sequences, you start with something like “what did you see?”
I’m not sure that third grade is an appropriate time to try to break that habit. That’s an age where at least some of the students are probably still in the preoperational stage. Kids naturally start to question adults’ reasoning more when they develop the capacity to manage those sorts of thoughts effectively.
Teaching students to grasp a complex topic will generally require walking them through various stages of simplification. Most third graders are probably still in the process of developing the foundational skills that they’ll eventually need in order to effectively learn complex topics without guessing the teacher’s password.
But then they don’t, so we need to try another method, yes?
We need to do something differently, but we need to make the right changes at the right places. If you want kids to better understand rationality when they grow up, you don’t want to start by teaching them things like the content of the Sequences, you start with something like “what did you see?”