NPR is starting off a series titled "50 Great Teachers" and is starting with Socrates:
We're starting this celebration of teaching with Socrates, the superstar teacher of the ancient world. He was sentenced to death more than 2,400 years ago for "impiety" and "corrupting" the minds of the youth of Athens.
But Socrates' ideas helped form the foundation of Western philosophy and the scientific method of inquiry. And his question-and-dialogue-based teaching style lives on in many classrooms as the Socratic method.
Most of us have been influenced by our teachers, and some of them may have even been great ones even if, unlike Socrates, they toiled in anonymity. So, I ask this question: Who were (or are) your greatest teachers, why, and what did you learn from them that made them so great?
(Score: 1) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday October 30 2014, @02:08AM
Reminds me of the time Richard Feynman got into a fight in the men's room of a bar. He showed up in class the next day with a black eye and leaned over the lectern and said menacingly, "Any questions?"
BTW Feynman's on the NPR list too. I know that for sure, and I haven't seen the list.