Description

Book Synopsis

Praise for Effective Instruction for STEM Disciplines

The world of today''s learners is a multimode, information-intensive universe of interactive bursts and virtual exchanges, yet our teaching methods retain the outdated characteristics of last generation''s study-and-drill approach. New pedagogical methods, detailed and justified in this groundbreaking work, are essential to prepare students to confront the concerns of the future. The book challenges our traditional assumptions and informs the science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) community of the latest research on how the brain learns and retains information, how enhanced student engagement with subject material and its context is essential to deep learning, and how to use this knowledge to structure STEM education approaches that work.
?DAVID V. KERNS, JR., Franklin and Mary Olin Distinguished Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering, and founding provost, Olin College



Table of Contents

Foreword xi

Preface xv

Acknowledgments xxv

About the Authors xxvii

1. Is There a Problem?: Or Is the Problem That We Don’t Think There Is a Problem? 1

2. Learning and Memory: How Does Learning Happen? 11

3. Perception: When All Else Fails, Start at the Beginning 45

4. Processing and Active Learning: How Does It Happen? 57

5. Bloom’s Taxonomy of Educational Objectives: Its Relationship to Course Outcomes 71

6. Interactive Engagement and Active Learning: Retrieval Events 83

7. Some Active Learning Techniques: Studying, Retrieval, and Schemata Construction 101

8. Problem-Based Learning: Where Am I Ever Going to Use This Stuff? 123

9. Transfer: What Are Your Course Outcomes? 153

10. Teaching for Transfer: Applying What Is Known 171

11. Applications 191

Appendix: Bloom’s Taxonomy and Educational Outcomes: The McBeath Action Verbs 221

Glossary 233

References 237

Index 249

Effective Instruction for STEM Disciplines

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    A Hardback by Edward J. Mastascusa, William J. Snyder, Brian S. Hoyt

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      View other formats and editions of Effective Instruction for STEM Disciplines by Edward J. Mastascusa

      Publisher: John Wiley & Sons Inc
      Publication Date: 10/06/2011
      ISBN13: 9780470474457, 978-0470474457
      ISBN10: 0470474459

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Praise for Effective Instruction for STEM Disciplines

      The world of today''s learners is a multimode, information-intensive universe of interactive bursts and virtual exchanges, yet our teaching methods retain the outdated characteristics of last generation''s study-and-drill approach. New pedagogical methods, detailed and justified in this groundbreaking work, are essential to prepare students to confront the concerns of the future. The book challenges our traditional assumptions and informs the science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) community of the latest research on how the brain learns and retains information, how enhanced student engagement with subject material and its context is essential to deep learning, and how to use this knowledge to structure STEM education approaches that work.
      ?DAVID V. KERNS, JR., Franklin and Mary Olin Distinguished Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering, and founding provost, Olin College



      Table of Contents

      Foreword xi

      Preface xv

      Acknowledgments xxv

      About the Authors xxvii

      1. Is There a Problem?: Or Is the Problem That We Don’t Think There Is a Problem? 1

      2. Learning and Memory: How Does Learning Happen? 11

      3. Perception: When All Else Fails, Start at the Beginning 45

      4. Processing and Active Learning: How Does It Happen? 57

      5. Bloom’s Taxonomy of Educational Objectives: Its Relationship to Course Outcomes 71

      6. Interactive Engagement and Active Learning: Retrieval Events 83

      7. Some Active Learning Techniques: Studying, Retrieval, and Schemata Construction 101

      8. Problem-Based Learning: Where Am I Ever Going to Use This Stuff? 123

      9. Transfer: What Are Your Course Outcomes? 153

      10. Teaching for Transfer: Applying What Is Known 171

      11. Applications 191

      Appendix: Bloom’s Taxonomy and Educational Outcomes: The McBeath Action Verbs 221

      Glossary 233

      References 237

      Index 249

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