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Playing and Exploring: Education Through the Discovery of Order [Kõva köide]

  • Formaat: Hardback, 236 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x156 mm
  • Sari: Routledge Revivals
  • Ilmumisaeg: 01-Oct-2025
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 104112435X
  • ISBN-13: 9781041124351
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  • Formaat: Hardback, 236 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x156 mm
  • Sari: Routledge Revivals
  • Ilmumisaeg: 01-Oct-2025
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 104112435X
  • ISBN-13: 9781041124351

First published in 1985, Playing and Exploring draws on many disciplines in order to formulate a new way of thinking about the nature and power of education. As so often with creative thinkers, Robin Hodgkin’s work is at once subversive and conservative.



First published in 1985, Playing and Exploring draws on many disciplines in order to formulate a new way of thinking about the nature and power of education. As so often with creative thinkers, Robin Hodgkin’s work is at once subversive and conservative. He is radical in insisting on the overriding need to question and subvert the external examination systems that now cripple education (and to raise standards by other means), conservative in asserting with Polanyi that an individual’s or a group’s enterprise draws on a living tradition. The book’s most important contribution is to our understanding of the educational needs of young adults, of the need for adventure and commitment.

The author develops a theoretical model that begins with the infant exploring its play space. He argues that the learner is an active, frontier-exploring agent; so too must be any effective teacher. Robin Hodgkin brings forward important new evidence from neuropsychology to show why doing is so important in teaching and learning. His argument that both visual and linguistic competence must cooperate actively in the learning process raises a fundamental question about the part television plays in our culture. In this as in his earlier books, his work is concerned with the real priorities in education, with demonstrating that first-hand feelings of friendship, of wonder, and of danger should be part of the education of all people, especially adolescents, and that our greatest and certainly most expensive failure is to deny the experience of educational success to so many children.

Introduction
1. New ground
2. Education making space for instruction
3. Things for use and things for meaning: tools and symbols
4. Competence
5.
The four roles of a teacher
6. Embodied form
7. Many-levelled theory
8.
Divided brain, uniting mind
9. Words and images
10. Success for all children
Postscript: On human talents
R.A. Hodgkin (19162013) was educationalist, Quaker and great mountaineer. He was principal of the Sudan Institute of Education from 194955; headmaster of Abbotsholme School, Derbyshire from 195567, and a Lecturer in the Oxford University Department of Education from 196977. From 197780, he was Chairman of the Mount Everest Foundation. He read widely in psychology, biology, anthropology and theology, and brought their lessons to bear on the curriculum.