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| Beyond Discipline: From Compliance to Community | 
enlarge | Author: Alfie Kohn Publisher: Association for Supervision & Curriculum Deve Category: Book
List Price: $23.95 Buy New: $21.55 You Save: $2.40 (10%)
New (7) Used (7) from $21.24
Avg. Customer Rating: 22 reviews Sales Rank: 9220
Media: Paperback Edition: 10th Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 191 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.6 Dimensions (in): 8.8 x 5.9 x 0.6
ISBN: 1416604723 Dewey Decimal Number: 371.5 EAN: 9781416604723 ASIN: 1416604723
Publication Date: August 30, 2006 Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
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| Editorial Reviews:
Book Description What is most remarkable about the assortment of discipline programs on the market today is the number of fundamental assumptions they seem to share. Some may advocate the use of carrots rather than sticks; some may refer to punishments as "logical consequences." But virtually all take for granted that the teacher must be in control of the classroom, and that what we need are strategies to get students to comply with the adult's expectations.Alfie Kohn challenged these widely accepted premises, and with them the very idea of classroom "management," when the original edition of Beyond Discipline was published in 1996. Since then, his path-breaking book has invited hundreds of thousands of educators to question the assumption that problems in the classroom are always the fault of students who don't do what they're told; instead, it may be necessary to reconsider what it is that they've been told to do--or to learn. Kohn shows how a fundamentally cynical view of children underlies the belief that we must tell them exactly how we expect them to behave and then offer "positive reinforcement" when they obey. Just as memorizing someone else's right answers fails to promote students' intellectual development, so does complying with someone else's expectations for how to act fail to help students develop socially or morally. Kohn contrasts the idea of discipline, in which things are done to students to control their behavior, with an approach in which we work with students to create caring communities where decisions are made together. Beyond Discipline has earned the status of an education classic, a vital alternative to all the traditional manuals that consist of techniques for imposing control. For this 10th anniversary edition, Kohn adds a new afterword that expands on the book's central themes and responds to questions from readers. Packed with stories from real classrooms around the country, seasoned with humor and grounded in a vision as practical as it is optimistic, Beyond Discipline shows how students are most likely to flourish in schools that have moved toward collaborative problem solving--and beyond discipline. Alfie Kohn is the author of many other books about education and human behavior, including Punished by Rewards, The Schools Our Children Deserve, and Unconditional Parenting.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 17 more reviews...
Refreshing and thought provoking June 23, 2008 I thoroughly enjoyed Alfie Kohn's book. It was a refreshing look at creating a democratic classroom where students are engaged, empowered, and respected. It will definitely influence how I behave in the classroom in the fall. It has led me to explore his other views and books on education and on parenting which I am currently reading.
Wordy May 20, 2008 The good: There are a lot of very good points in this book. I have seen first hand what rewards and punishments do. Nothing to stop "bad" behavior. The same kids are in detention at my school every week. Also they ask, "What do I get for doing my homework". Kohn addresses these problems by insetad building relationships with students and allowing them a chance to make real decisions. If you were reading this book there are great answers. Building a community would prevent a majority of the "behavior" troubles in the school I teach at. Kohn is not all knowing so not everyone should take everything he says as the absolute truth, nor should they dismiss everything he says. The bad: He spent half the book pointing out why others are wrong, this could have been discussed in a chapter. He did not actually show concrete proof this worked, but I challenge anyone to find concrete proof anywhere. Even elaborate studies are never completly conclusive. He only taught for a little while. I guess this means that he is incompetant. Or, it means that he was completely self motivated and didn't spend the tens of thousands of dollars to get another degree and have some one say he was, indeed, competent. Maybe he is well read and spends a lot of time observing. I guess read the book and see if he makes sense or if you think he is a quack. Either way this is one of the most important classroom "management" books out there, so as an educator you should read it.
Book review March 5, 2008 0 out of 2 found this review helpful
I agree with other reviews here. The book spends alot of paper criticizing traditional education methods. Also, the book is wordy. Glance over the first five to six chapters and only read the second half of the book.
The behaviorist that dogs behavior August 4, 2007 0 out of 5 found this review helpful
This book is well written, but he dogs many of the reinforcements teachers used calling them "punishments". He doesn't explain intrinsic and extrinsic rewards can be helpful, not just punishments.
Beyond Discipline: From Compliance to Community April 11, 2007 1 out of 5 found this review helpful
This is a good resource for all educators...
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