"Educational Psychology: Developing Learners" is known for its exceptionally clear and engaging writing, its in-depth focus on learning, and its extensive concrete applications. Its unique approach helps students understand concepts by examining their own learning and then showing them how to apply these concepts as teachers. More than any other educational psychology text, this text moves seamlessly between theory and applications, features the most extensive and integrated coverage of diversity, contexts of learning, neuropsychology and brain development, and classroom applications of technology. It includes innumerable concrete examples to help readers connect educational psychology to real children and classrooms. From reviews of the book: "Rather than simply presenting the necessary content, the author makes you feel like she is talking directly to you. . . . I love that diversity that has been woven throughout the fabric of this text. . . . Ormrod's personalized writing style will reach undergraduate students in a way that few authors can. [The book] is concise, yet thorough; comprehensive, yet unpretentious."--Angela Bloomquist, California University of Pennsylvania 'Compared to other texts, Ormrod's text is written in a more accessible way. . . . Strengths [include] accessibility, good use of supplementary materials, [and] updated research."--David Yun Dai, University at Albany, SUNY "Love how each chapter discusses diversity and special needs! . . . Most students keep this text throughout their teaching careers as a resource. Of all the educational psychology textbooks that I've used, this one is the most comprehensive and interactive with vivid examples. . . . The supplemental materials are very useful. The power point is extensive and easy to use for lecture. I use the test bank materials and find the questions to be aligned with students' licensure exams."--Cindy Ballantyne, Northern Arizona University Note: MyEducationLab does not come automatically packaged with this text. To purchase MyEducationLab, please visit: www.myeducationlab.com or you can purchase a valuepack of the physical text + MyEducationLab.
As this is the only one of these I've read, and I'm a student, its hard to be fair in the appraisal. On the up side, if you're being forced to read this because you're training to be a teacher, it does put a lot of effort into explaining why you should care and how this stuff might vary based on the grade of the student. Disturbingly, the reading level of the book is kind of low, which is more of a sad comment on who is training to become a teacher these days than anything. I mean seriously, one would hope that college level reading skills in a group of people who are going to become teachers would be assumed, but I guess not.
Despite being packed with instrumental information for upcoming teachers, this book is nearly impossible to get though. It is boring, dry and wy too long. Much of the information here is redundant as many of the vignettes re-state info that was already written in the same chapters.
had to read it for my EDUC 2130 class, and I think it should count towards my reading challenge, and learned a lot of good information that I will keep in mind when I start teaching in 2024.
I read this for one of my graduate school classes. It offers a comprehensive review of learning theory, culturally responsive teaching, and classroom strategies in a readable format that includes relatable case studies and samples of student work. This was one of the rare assigned readings I never minded doing.
Overall good textbook on Educational Psychology, and I feel that I learned a lot of useful information. Only one complaint, the author uses the statement "and so on" a bit too often throughout the book.
I especially felt that the last chapter of the book would be of interest to many people outside of the educational setting, such as parents and legislators who determine the reasoning behind "high-stakes" testing with regards to school and teacher accountability.
Fantastic readability for a textbook. I read this for my online class, and the style was developed enough to keep me interested and there were plenty of engaging activities to illustrate the principles. I learned the whole class on my own with just this book. The author also does a great job addressing diversity in the classroom, something that was left out in my other courses. This was pretty much the only book I got to read this semester, but I can actually say I enjoyed it.
As text books go, this was not a bad textbook. The author attempts to make the material interesting by including anecdotes from her own life and experience, and opening each section with a case study.
This isn't the best textbook out there. Highlighted vocab words disconnected from definitions or definitions not existing anywhere on the page. Examples that don't correlate with the ideas. Of course, I learned a good amount from it but I've certainly seen stronger and more fluent material.
Currently finishing up this book for a class. I'm currently a teacher working on a Masters Degree.
The pros: Easy to read, occasionally a practical tip or two. Several interesting theoretical thoughts.
The cons: I'm currently a teacher. I want things I can do right now in my classroom. This book isn't great with showing me applications for the theories presented.