Description

Book Synopsis
The Agency by Design guide to implementing maker-centered teaching and learning

Maker-Centered Learning provides both a theoretical framework and practical resources for the educators, curriculum developers, librarians, administrators, and parents navigating this burgeoning field. Written by the expert team from the Agency by Design initiative at Harvard''s Project Zero, this book

  • Identifies a set of educational practices and ideas that define maker-centered learning, and introduces the focal concepts of maker empowerment and sensitivity to design.
  • Shares cutting edge research that provides evidence of the benefits of maker-centered learning for students and education as a whole.
  • Presents a clear Project Zero-based framework for maker-centered teaching and learning
  • Includes valuable educator resources that can be applied in a variety of design and maker-centered learning environments
  • Describes unique thinking rout

    Table of Contents

    Acknowledgments ix

    List of Tables and Figures xiii

    Foreword xix

    Introduction 1

    What is a Maker? And What is Maker-Centered Learning? 4

    A Road Map to the Journey Ahead 8

    1 Exploring the Benefits of Maker-Centered Learning 15

    Learning from Maker Educators and Thought Leaders 17

    Identifying the Real Benefits of Maker-Centered Learning 18

    Understanding the Primary Outcomes of Maker-Centered Learning: Developing Agency and Building Character 19

    Understanding the Secondary Outcomes of Maker-Centered Learning: Cultivating Discipline-Specific and Maker-Specific Knowledge and Skills 35

    Recapping the Real Benefits of Maker-Centered Learning 39

    2 Teaching and Learning in the Maker-Centered Classroom 43

    Maker-Centered Roots and Connections 45

    Who (and What) Are the Teachers in the Maker-Centered Classroom? 51

    Students as Teachers 51

    Teachers in the Community 55

    Online Knowledge Sourcing 56

    Tools and Materials as Teachers 57

    What Does Teaching Look Like in the Maker-Centered Classroom? 59

    Facilitating Student Collaboration 60

    Encouraging Co-inspiration and Co-critique 63

    Redirecting Authority and the Ethics of Knowledge Sharing 70

    What Does Learning Look Like in the Maker-Centered Classroom? 73

    Figuring It Out 74

    What Does the Maker-Centered Classroom Look Like? 77

    Tools and Materials 78

    Storage and Visibility 80

    Specific and Flexible Spaces 83

    3 Developing a Sense of Maker Empowerment 85

    What Is Agency? 89

    Choice, Intention, and Action 89

    Scope: Agency and the Complex Web of Interrelated Actions 91

    Locus: Participating in Agentic Action 94

    Agency and Maker Empowerment 98

    Empowerment and Social Justice 101

    Empowerment in Education 103

    4 Developing a Sensitivity to Design 109

    Developing a Sensitivity to Design in a Consumer-Driven World 111

    The Hidden Mechanics of Stuff 112

    Living in the Throes of a Throwaway Culture 114

    What Is a Sensitivity to Design? 116

    How Are Students Sensitive (or Not) to Design? 120

    Seeing the Designed World as Malleable 122

    5 Maker-Centered Teaching and Learning in Action 127

    A Framework for Maker Empowerment 128

    Looking Closely 130

    Exploring Complexity 133

    Finding Opportunity 136

    Tools and Techniques for Supporting Maker-Centered Thinking and Learning 141

    Dispositional Development and Thinking Routines 142

    Developing Thinking Routines to Support a Sensitivity to Design 142

    Conclusion 155

    Maker-Centered Learning: Challenges and Puzzles 157

    Considering the Ethical Dimensions of Maker-Centered Learning 158

    Equity and Access in the Maker-Centered Classroom 159

    Supporting and Sustaining Maker-Centered Practice 162

    Looking Ahead: The Future of Maker-Centered Learning 163

    Imagine If. 166

    Afterword 169

    Appendix A: Overview of Interview Participants 173

    Appendix B: Thinking Routines 175

    Notes 185

    References 195

    Index 203

    About the Authors 223

MakerCentered Learning

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    £22.10

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    RRP £26.00 – you save £3.90 (15%)

    Order before 4pm today for delivery by Tue 7 Jul 2026.

    A Paperback / softback by Edward P. Clapp, Jessica Ross, Jennifer O. Ryan

    20 in stock

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      View other formats and editions of MakerCentered Learning by Edward P. Clapp

      Publisher: John Wiley & Sons Inc
      Publication Date: 23/12/2016
      ISBN13: 9781119259701, 978-1119259701
      ISBN10: 1119259703

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      The Agency by Design guide to implementing maker-centered teaching and learning

      Maker-Centered Learning provides both a theoretical framework and practical resources for the educators, curriculum developers, librarians, administrators, and parents navigating this burgeoning field. Written by the expert team from the Agency by Design initiative at Harvard''s Project Zero, this book

      • Identifies a set of educational practices and ideas that define maker-centered learning, and introduces the focal concepts of maker empowerment and sensitivity to design.
      • Shares cutting edge research that provides evidence of the benefits of maker-centered learning for students and education as a whole.
      • Presents a clear Project Zero-based framework for maker-centered teaching and learning
      • Includes valuable educator resources that can be applied in a variety of design and maker-centered learning environments
      • Describes unique thinking rout

        Table of Contents

        Acknowledgments ix

        List of Tables and Figures xiii

        Foreword xix

        Introduction 1

        What is a Maker? And What is Maker-Centered Learning? 4

        A Road Map to the Journey Ahead 8

        1 Exploring the Benefits of Maker-Centered Learning 15

        Learning from Maker Educators and Thought Leaders 17

        Identifying the Real Benefits of Maker-Centered Learning 18

        Understanding the Primary Outcomes of Maker-Centered Learning: Developing Agency and Building Character 19

        Understanding the Secondary Outcomes of Maker-Centered Learning: Cultivating Discipline-Specific and Maker-Specific Knowledge and Skills 35

        Recapping the Real Benefits of Maker-Centered Learning 39

        2 Teaching and Learning in the Maker-Centered Classroom 43

        Maker-Centered Roots and Connections 45

        Who (and What) Are the Teachers in the Maker-Centered Classroom? 51

        Students as Teachers 51

        Teachers in the Community 55

        Online Knowledge Sourcing 56

        Tools and Materials as Teachers 57

        What Does Teaching Look Like in the Maker-Centered Classroom? 59

        Facilitating Student Collaboration 60

        Encouraging Co-inspiration and Co-critique 63

        Redirecting Authority and the Ethics of Knowledge Sharing 70

        What Does Learning Look Like in the Maker-Centered Classroom? 73

        Figuring It Out 74

        What Does the Maker-Centered Classroom Look Like? 77

        Tools and Materials 78

        Storage and Visibility 80

        Specific and Flexible Spaces 83

        3 Developing a Sense of Maker Empowerment 85

        What Is Agency? 89

        Choice, Intention, and Action 89

        Scope: Agency and the Complex Web of Interrelated Actions 91

        Locus: Participating in Agentic Action 94

        Agency and Maker Empowerment 98

        Empowerment and Social Justice 101

        Empowerment in Education 103

        4 Developing a Sensitivity to Design 109

        Developing a Sensitivity to Design in a Consumer-Driven World 111

        The Hidden Mechanics of Stuff 112

        Living in the Throes of a Throwaway Culture 114

        What Is a Sensitivity to Design? 116

        How Are Students Sensitive (or Not) to Design? 120

        Seeing the Designed World as Malleable 122

        5 Maker-Centered Teaching and Learning in Action 127

        A Framework for Maker Empowerment 128

        Looking Closely 130

        Exploring Complexity 133

        Finding Opportunity 136

        Tools and Techniques for Supporting Maker-Centered Thinking and Learning 141

        Dispositional Development and Thinking Routines 142

        Developing Thinking Routines to Support a Sensitivity to Design 142

        Conclusion 155

        Maker-Centered Learning: Challenges and Puzzles 157

        Considering the Ethical Dimensions of Maker-Centered Learning 158

        Equity and Access in the Maker-Centered Classroom 159

        Supporting and Sustaining Maker-Centered Practice 162

        Looking Ahead: The Future of Maker-Centered Learning 163

        Imagine If. 166

        Afterword 169

        Appendix A: Overview of Interview Participants 173

        Appendix B: Thinking Routines 175

        Notes 185

        References 195

        Index 203

        About the Authors 223

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