Perhaps the most depressing thing about education research is the total absence of historical memory and the continual reinvention of the wheel.
A librarian calls for the banning of reading lists (鈥Ban reading lists to drive teaching innovation, librarian says鈥, News, 23 March), but these lists were often demanded by librarians in the first place while academics protested that they undermined research skills; two academics 鈥渆xperiment鈥 with 鈥渟een exams鈥 and discover, as academics did in the 1980s, that they produce high-quality, engaged results (鈥Unseen benefits鈥, Opinion, 23 March); and the president of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology discovers (鈥鈥業f we don鈥檛 know how we learn, how on earth do聽we know how to聽teach?鈥鈥, Features, 23 March) that the model of studying independently, then discussing and applying, which was used by naval academies from the 18th century onwards, is a highly successful way of encouraging students to be actively engaged.
Farah Mendlesohn
Staffordshire University
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