Description

Book Synopsis

How we select, prepare, and support teachers has become a surprisingly common topic among journalists, politicians, and policymakers. Contemporary recommendations on teaching and teachers, whatever their intentions, fail to assess this deeply human activity from its historical roots. In The Teaching Instinct: Explorations Into What Makes Us Human, Kip Téllez invites us to reappraise teaching through a wide lens and argues that our capacity to teach is one part culture, two parts genetic. By rescuing the field of instinct psychology from the margins, this challenging book explores topics as diverse as teaching in other species, teaching across human cultures, and the development of teaching in young children, finally drawing readers into a discussion about how our teaching instinct influences modern teacher learning, selection, and preparation. Drawing on disciplines as diverse as comparative biology, evolutionary psychology, and teacher education policy, Téllez warns us that

Table of Contents

Contents

1. What Is Teaching? What Is Instinct?

2. Teaching in Other Species

3. When Do We Know How to Teach?

4. Is Teaching Universal in Human Cultures?

5. How Do We Find the Instinct, and Can It Be Measured?

6. "You Didn’t Know What You Didn’t Know": Steven’s Story

7. Concluding Thoughts

Appendix: Parenting as Teaching

References

The Teaching Instinct

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    £42.99

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    Order before 4pm today for delivery by Wed 8 Jul 2026.

    A Paperback / softback by Kip Téllez

    15 in stock

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      Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
      Publication Date: 21/03/2016
      ISBN13: 9781138645479, 978-1138645479
      ISBN10: 1138645478

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      How we select, prepare, and support teachers has become a surprisingly common topic among journalists, politicians, and policymakers. Contemporary recommendations on teaching and teachers, whatever their intentions, fail to assess this deeply human activity from its historical roots. In The Teaching Instinct: Explorations Into What Makes Us Human, Kip Téllez invites us to reappraise teaching through a wide lens and argues that our capacity to teach is one part culture, two parts genetic. By rescuing the field of instinct psychology from the margins, this challenging book explores topics as diverse as teaching in other species, teaching across human cultures, and the development of teaching in young children, finally drawing readers into a discussion about how our teaching instinct influences modern teacher learning, selection, and preparation. Drawing on disciplines as diverse as comparative biology, evolutionary psychology, and teacher education policy, Téllez warns us that

      Table of Contents

      Contents

      1. What Is Teaching? What Is Instinct?

      2. Teaching in Other Species

      3. When Do We Know How to Teach?

      4. Is Teaching Universal in Human Cultures?

      5. How Do We Find the Instinct, and Can It Be Measured?

      6. "You Didn’t Know What You Didn’t Know": Steven’s Story

      7. Concluding Thoughts

      Appendix: Parenting as Teaching

      References

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