Kathleen Gabriel's latest is timely, thorough, and highly practical (that is, if you can handle the 11-point typeface). She recommends classroom-tested practices that set a healthy climate, increase motivation, cultivate a growth mindset, advance reading and writing skills, and foster critical thinking. She stresses that if the instructor doesn't make the course relevant, use the textbook in class, involve students in active analysis and application of new ideas, set appropriate challenges, provide helpful feedback, and value diversity, students will quickly disengage. Nobody wants to spend time and energy doing a pointless or impossible task with inadequate recognition.
What makes this book so timely? Technology, for one thing. The 50-minute lecture might have worked from time to time in the good old days when students came to class with pens and notebooks, but it doesn't work at all now that they've all got a smartphone in their hand. Another thing that makes this book so timely is the changing student demographic. Many students come to college without the necessary cultural capital. If they are going to succeed in the classroom, it's up to the instructor to clue them in. "Notions such as 'They should have learned this in high school' may be true,: says Gabriel, "but this attitude does not help the students or the professors. Fortunately, there are alternatives" (p. 19).
I'm a little wary of Gabriel's emphasis on resilience and mental toughness. While I agree that both qualities contribute to student success, I'm also aware that they can easily be undermined by a host of outside factors such as financial distress, family issues, personal crises, undiagnosed learning disabilities, mental illness, feelings of alienation, and stereotype threat.