Michael Clay Thompson On Language, Grammar, Poetry and Teaching
"Language is the core of all content."
"In my books I build in thinking taxonomies and whole brain approaches, and I
try to communicate an enthusiasm about learning that makes over-excitability seem
normal and right, which it is."
"Our language is a vast collection of echoes, and we are reviving and continuing
the sounds of ancient voices with each sentence."
...on pop-culture and the classics: "I've always had the feeling that the
heroic glories of great academics are buried in our culture, buried under
blizzards of anti-intellectual pop-culture norms, mores, attitudes, and products,
so I've tried to use my books to dig out dazzling academics and put them on
display in a way that the kids can see them."
...on poetry: "Poetry is the victim of false stereotypes and misunderstandings
about what it really is. We tend to relegate poetry to the sidelines, doing a
few poems in class if we get time, and even then just reading them from a
so-called interpretive point of view, ignoring all the technical wizardry that
really makes them poems."
"If students don't learn about poetic techniques, they will be unable to
appreciate great prose, because the great prose writers all wrote poetry too,
and used those devices in their novels, plays and essays."
...on the design of his books on poetics: "I wanted to find ways to make
poetics visible to kids"
...on Plato and teaching the gifted: "Plato's dialogues about Socrates have
been my primary intellectual influence. That to acknowledge what you do not know
is the crucial test of intellectual authenticity. Socratic teaching is a sine
qua non for gifted pedagogy."
...on tests: "Tests have an inherently low ceiling…and basic tests are the
ones that dominate. There is a danger in a 'test culture' of reducing education
to a focus on small knowledge."
...on teaching grammar: "The whole country has spent twenty years taking
grammar out of the system... now we are in a state of panic because all the
grammar teachers have retired!"
"It is easy to forget, when looking at a ponderous grammar textbook, what a
little topic grammar is. There are only eight parts of speech, about five parts
of the sentence, several kinds of phrases and a few clauses. If you compact
these four little levels of grammar into the first weeks of class, you can
usefully apply the grammar to all of the other language experiences during the year."
...on teaching vocabulary: "Learning the 100 most common Latin and Greek
stems in the English language gives you access to at least 5,000 words. This
is the fast-track, the power-path, to a strong vocabulary... infinitely more
powerful than learning one word at a time."
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