附註:"A Bradford book."
Includes bibliographical references (pages 291-309) and index.
Cognitive science and educational practice: an introduction / Kate McGilly -- Rightstart: providing the central conceptual prerequisites for first formal learning of arithmetic to students at risk for school failure / Sharon A. Griffin, Robbie Case, and Robert S. Siegler -- A cognitive approach to the teaching of physics / Earl Hunt and Jim Minstrell -- Enhancing the acquisition of conceptual structures through hypermedia / Kathryn T. Spoehr -- Intelligence in context: enhancing students' practical intelligence for school / Howard Gardner [and others] -- Classroom applications of cognitive science: teaching poor readers how to learn, think and problem solve / Irene W. Gaskins -- From visual word problems to learning communities: changing conceptions of cognitive research / The Cognition and Technology Group at Vanderbilt -- The CSILE Project: trying to bring the classroom into world 3 / Marlene Scardamalia, Carl Bereiter, and Mary Lamon -- Guided discovery in a community of learners / Ann L. Brown and Joseph C. Campione -- Classroom problems, school culture, and cognitive research / John T. Bruer.
摘要:A timely complement to John Bruer's Schools for Thought, Classroom Lessons documents eight projects that apply cognitive research to improve classroom practice. The chapter authors are all principal investigators in an influential research initiative on cognitive science and education. Classroom Lessons describes their collaborations with classroom teachers aimed at improving teaching and learning for students in grades K-12. The eight projects cover writing, mathematics, history, social science, and physics. Together they illustrate that principles emerging from cognitive science form the basis of a science of instruction that can be applied across the curriculum.The book is divided into three sections: applications of cognitive research to teaching specific content areas; applications for learning across the curriculum; and applications that challenge traditional concepts of classroom-based learning environments.Chapters consider explicit models of knowledge with corresponding instruction designed to enable learners to build on that knowledge, acquisition of specified knowledge, and what knowledge is useful in contemporary curricula.ContributorsKate McGilly. Sharon A. Griffin, Robbie Case, and Robert S. Siegler. Earl Hunt and Jim Minstrell. Kathryn T. Spoehr. Howard Gardner, Mara Krechevsky, Robert J. Sternberg, and Lynn Okagaki. Irene W. Gaskins. The Cognition and Technology Group at Vanderbilt. Marlene Scardamalia, Carl Bereiter, and Mary Lamon. Ann L. Brown and Joseph C. Campione. John T. Bruer.A Bradford Book