Teaching Machines
By Audrey Watters
By Audrey Watters
By Audrey Watters
By Audrey Watters
Category: Science & Technology
Category: Science & Technology
-
$24.95
Feb 07, 2023 | ISBN 9780262546065
-
Aug 03, 2021 | ISBN 9780262363754
YOU MAY ALSO LIKE
The Slow Birding Journal
The Line
Daydreaming in the Solar System
Cryptography
Determined
Life on Svalbard
Field Notes from a Fungi Forager
Cosmos
Robot-Proof, revised and updated edition
Praise
“This is a landmark book…“Reading Teaching Machines is like donning a pair of glasses that suddenly makes much of the present more explicable. This is why I want to urge people to read this book with all possible haste.”
—Inside Higher Ed
“For generations, important men (like B.F. Skinner) have been promising that technology will take the place of teachers. Watters deep history examines the forces that view teaching, teachers, and students as problems to be solved, rather than humans to be engaged.”
—Chicago Tribune
“A thoroughly researched book…The book is fascinating and very readable, loaded with well-chosen details. Reading this story, one suspects it might be fair to say that it is ed tech, not public education, that has not made a significant step forward in the last 100 years.”
—Forbes
“Watters’s central thesis is a powerful one, and Teaching Machines provides a breath-taking array of examples to back it up.”
—Schools Week
“Watters’ much-anticipated and long-in-the- making book fills a gaping hole in our understanding of the origin and implementation of education technology…This major piece of work will establish her as the foremost public intellectual and independent scholar in the field.”
—EduBlog
“Long before the advent of personal computers, inventors and researchers created what they called “teaching machines” in hopes of revolutionizing education. Some of these creations date back to the 1920s, and were made from wood and brass. Yet today’s edtech leaders often ignore or choose to forget this history, argues Audrey Watters, a longtime critical observer of edtech…Watters traces the history of these pre-computer-age gadgets in her new book, Teaching Machines: The History of Personalized Learning.
—EdSurge
“… a fascinating history”
—Education Next
Table Of Contents
Introduction 1
1 B.F. Skinner Builds a Teaching Machine 19
2 Sidney Pressey and the Automatic Teacher 35
3 “Mechanical Education Wanted” 61
4 The Commercialization of B.F. Skinner’s First Machines 81
5 B.F. Skinner Tries Again 107
6 Programmed Instruction: In Theory and Practice 135
7 Imagining the Mechanization of Teachers’ Work 149
8 Hollins College and “The Roanoke Experiment” 167
9 Teaching Machines, Inc. 179
10 B.F. Skinner’s Disillusionment 195
11 Programmed Instruction and the Practice of Freedom 213
12 Against B.F. Skinner 231
Conclusion 245
Acknowledgments 265
Notes 269
Index 301
21 Books You’ve Been Meaning to Read
Just for joining you’ll get personalized recommendations on your dashboard daily and features only for members.
Find Out More Join Now Sign In