J.W.
A-List Customer
- Messages
- 312
- Location
- Southern tip of northern Germany
I'm currently doing some research on something, that is called "Lehrerraumprinzip" in German. It basically means that a schoolteacher has his own room at school and all students come to his class, instead of the other way around, as it is still the case in most German schools. Here, the students have their own classroom and the teachers go there in order to teach. Only science lessons are taught in special classrooms, so the German system can be called student-centered.
In the U.S., teachers usually have a classroom of their own, which they can decorate and equip to their needs and keep their teaching material for quick access. But is there a special term for this? "Lehrerraumprinzip" translates roughly as "teacher room principle". I'm not talking about homeroom, where teachers take attendance and look after organizational matters.
I wouldn't be surprised to find that this is another German peculiarity, whereas the rest of the world simply calls this "classroom". Then again: because it is the normal thing in the U.S. for teachers to have their own classroom, there might not be the need to find a special term for it.
"Gary" or "Platoon" model might be going into the right direction, but I've still got to have a closer look at these.
Hope someone here can help me solve the question.
In the U.S., teachers usually have a classroom of their own, which they can decorate and equip to their needs and keep their teaching material for quick access. But is there a special term for this? "Lehrerraumprinzip" translates roughly as "teacher room principle". I'm not talking about homeroom, where teachers take attendance and look after organizational matters.
I wouldn't be surprised to find that this is another German peculiarity, whereas the rest of the world simply calls this "classroom". Then again: because it is the normal thing in the U.S. for teachers to have their own classroom, there might not be the need to find a special term for it.
"Gary" or "Platoon" model might be going into the right direction, but I've still got to have a closer look at these.
Hope someone here can help me solve the question.