
Play Mountain's Bookshelf for Adults
BOOK CATEGORIES
Click on any highlighted title to order the book from amazon.com (all
sales benefit Play Mountain Place).
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How
to Talk So Kids Will Listen and Listen So Kids Will Talk,
Adele Faber & Elaine Mazlish
Excellent book on respectful communication with children, with cartoon
examples of "do's" and "don'ts."
How
to Talk So Kids Can Learn,
Adele Faber & Elaine Mazlish
Award-winning book which helps teachers and parents help children
with problems that could interfere with learning. Emphasis on self-direction
and self-discipline.
Teacher
Effectiveness Training,
Thomas Gordon
Older classic on styles of teacher/child communication which keep
communication channels open in the classroom.

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Your
Child's Self Esteem,
Dorothy Corkille-Briggs
Clear statements on what self esteem is, how it develops, how important
it is, and guidelines for parents to foster high self esteem in
their children.
Emotional
Intelligence,
Daniel Goleman
The author discusses how emotional skills are more important to
life satisfaction and success than IQ. He offers strategies for
educators and parents to assist children in developing these important
skills.
Playground
Politics,
Stanley I. Greenspan, MD
The playground is as important as the classroom. Elementary children's
emotional and social lives are busy with practicing and establishing
the interpersonal skills that will serve them their whole lives.
They need as much adult help, if not more, with interpersonal dynamics
and emotional skills, as with intellectual skill building.
The
Magical Child,
Joseph Chilton Pearce
Right from the instant of birth, says Joseph Chilton Pearce, the
human child has only one concern -- to learn all that there is to
learn about the world. But in the West we tend to thwart this concern
from the very start. Available once again, the Magical Child shows
how to restore this amazing capacity for creative intelligence that
is innate in every human.

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OPEN
CLASSROOM & HUMANISTIC TEACHING
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Deschooling
Our Lives,
edited by Matt Hern (1996, New Society Publishers)
C hallenges our assumptions about the nature of education by illustrating
many learner-centered options that people are doing (successfully!)
in place of traditional schooling.
Summerhill
School: A New View of Childhood,
A.S. Neill (1960, edited by Albert Lamb, 1996)
Portrays the development of Play Mountain's "ideological match,"
a well-known free school in England. Summerhill is based on Neill's
firm belief in self-regulation and allowing children to make their
own rules and determine for themselves how much to study.
Making
It Up As We Go Along,
Chris Mercogliano (1998, Heinemann Press)
Tells of the real life experiences of The Albany Free School where
the guiding principles of educating are "love, emotional honesty,
peer-level leadership, and cooperation" (p. 19). Founded in 1969.
Lives
of Children,
George Dennison (1969)
Now over 30 years old, this book's lessons are still invaluable.
It gives the day by day diary of a teacher helping to start a unique
elementary free school in urban New York. (Out of print: Amazon
will attempt to find a copy. You can also try www.bibliofind.com,
or Emanuel at The Community School in Maine may also have some extra
copies.)

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Teacher,
Sylvia Ashton-Warner
This book reads like a diary and includes wonderful stories of the
author's "organic teaching" of reading to Maori children in New
Zealand. Her joy in life comes through in every sentence.
Dumbing
Us Down,
John Taylor Gatto
A critique of traditional school structure and teaching styles which
limit and harm students' creativity, self esteem, ability to solve
problems and think critically, and dramatically increase the chances
that they will hate learning for the rest of their lives.

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On
Becoming a Person,
Carl Rogers
A work that helped define humanistic psychology, and a good first
book of Carl Rogers' thinking. Discusses the "person centered" view
of human development, and "person centered" psychology.

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Freedom
and Beyond,
John Holt
A critique of society and the place of traditional education in
it. Some wonderful thoughts on uses of freedom, tensions of freedom,
authority, choice, deschooling.
Pedagogy
of the Oppressed,
Paulo Friere
An absolute must for educators who wish to understand the implications
of the choice of educational methodology, particularly in literacy
learning. Friere's understanding of the inherent liberation or oppression
of various methods is a clarifying underpinning for an educator
who wants to foster equal opportunity for every child. His passion
keeps the reader inspired through this theoretical book, which is
sometimes a slow read.
Pedagogy
of Hope,
Paulo Friere
Published years after "Pedagogy of Oppression", this is a reflection
upon the early work and upon his lifetime of applying his methodology
in a multitude of countries and settings. The most important figure
in literacy campaigns in our century.
Looking
for Home,
Carollyne Sinclaire
A book that explores the potential for using the classroom as a
place for "becoming at home in the world," not merely a place of
instruction. It contains more inclusive educational goals, like
Play Mountain Place's.
Education
and Ecstasy,
George B. Leonard
Believing that learning changes the learner, learning involved interaction
with the environment, and that education, at best, is ecstatic,
the author in 1968 explored what schools could be. Much is still
relevant today.

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ANTI-BIAS
/ MULTI-CULTURAL
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Filtering
People: Understanding and Confronting Our Prejudices,
Jim Cole
A simply written, but highly intelligent book which shows how prejudices
develop and can be overcome.
Everyday
Acts Against Racism,
Maureen T. Reddy, ed.
This book looks at practical ways teachers and parents have acted
against overt and subtle racism.

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