The intellectual grounding and practical strategies tomorrow’s teachers need to be effective instructors . Educational Theory and Practice offers complete, up-to-date information that is presented in readable, practical ways and illustrated with engaging examples and case studies. Embedded videos and interactive activities in the Enhanced Pearson eText in MyLab Education further illustrate key concepts and facilitate application. The text makes the connection between theory and practice explicit, helping students transfer what they learn to their own teaching. The Twelfth Edition reflects ongoing changes in our learning sciences that continue to transform educational psychology and teaching, incorporating new research and practical applications of many contemporary topics. Also available with MyLab Education MyLab Education is an online homework, tutorial, and assessment program designed to work with the text to engage students and improve results. Within its structured environment, students see key concepts demonstrated through real classroom video footage, practice what they learn, test their understanding, and receive feedback to guide their learning and ensure they master key learning outcomes. You are purchasing a standalone product; MyLab Education does not come packaged with this content. Students, if interested in purchasing this title with MyLab Education, ask your instructor to confirm the correct package ISBN and Course ID. Instructors, contact your Pearson representative for more information.
If you would like to purchase both the physical text and MyLab Education, search 0134995198 / 9780134995199 Educational Theory and Practice with MyLab Education with Enhanced Pearson eText, Access Card Package Package consists
Judging from this book, educational psychology is a field of social science that examines formal education, a fundamentally horrible and inefficient method of knowledge transferral, and attempts to make it less awful, without actually changing the most horrible and inefficient parts about it. Since the industrial revolution, students have been shunted into age-based grade levels and classrooms (is there any other way to learn?) and guided through a planned curriculum by a teacher (suck from the teat of knowledge, little ones!) but now, thanks to educational psychologists, they'll also be ushered into "student-centered learning schemes" and "cooperative learning roles" and "project learning tasks" and other such jargony endeavors that continue to ignore the absolute Orwellian absurdity of knowledge coming from a lesson plan and textbook.
This popular book from renowned educational psychologist Robert Slavin translates theory into practices that teachers can use in their classrooms with a further inquiry into the concept of intentionality. An "intentional teacher," according to Slavin, is one who constantly reflects on his or her practices and makes instructional decisions based on a clear conception of how these practices affect students. To help readers become "intentional teachers," the author offers a set of questions to guide them and models best practices through classroom examples. Educational Psychology prepares teachers as no other text does. It teaches them to think about how students develop and learn, to make decisions before and during instruction, and to consider what constitutes evidence that their students are learning and succeeding. This edition includes new sections on brain research, expanded coverage of Title I, programs for language minority students, and comprehensive school reform. It contains new critiques of assessment and accountability strategies, and a substantially updated treatment of programming for students with special needs. A new feature, "Technology Cases," presents practical uses of technology related to the contents of the chapters. A self-check feature, appearing throughout the chapters, links chapter contents to INTASC standards, and self assessments at the end of each chapter are linked to the content and format of PRAXIS. Designed for anyone interested in educational psychology or in the psychology of learning.
1. This book is for those who want to be teachers, not for those who are students, although students can learn some from it. 2. Also a good guide for parents who have a kid. 3. Some parts are quite boring, especially the chapter about tests. 4. Educating is hard: most of the suggestions and theories make sense to me but in light of tight budget and time stress, I don't think schools and teachers will accept these ideas in practice.
Just finished reading it from cover to cover and I would say it's a good textbook, covers broad ranges of topics with varying degrees. Definitely recommended for students of psychology or educational psychology
I used this textbook about ten years ago for my educational psychology class. Now I am using another of his books for a grad level foundations of education class.
this book provides a general overview of many educational theories, mostly the popular, common-knowledge theories, such as those by piaget, vygotsky, erikson, etc. as the title suggests, it discusses the psychology behind development in an educational context, which provides educators with necessary information regarding these theories and how to use them in the classroom. overall, useful for both pre-service and current teachers.
Yes, this a textbook, so naturally it is information-dense and dry at times. However, it was well-written and provides extremely useful information. Chapters covered topics such as theories of development, behavioral theories of learning, information processing and cognitive theories of learning, student-centered and constructivist approaches to learning, accommodating instruction to meet individual needs, the effective lesson, motivating students to learn, effective learning environments, and more.
Self-Assessments are limited because they focus only on the opening vignette. The sidebar videos I did not find beneficial. The effective teacher's classroom videos for the most part were usually very informative and relevant to applying skills to real life. The text was not difficult to read, but they could have expanded on a few areas instead of cramming lots of new information into a single paragraph. It didn't go into nearly enough things that I didn't already know about teaching and students. Not as informative as I had hoped.
Did not have this edition, but rather a "Pearson Custom" that culled from this book. It was ok, I learned some good stuff from it, but there were several concepts that were unclear, even after much class discussion. I shouldn't hold it against the book that the professor didn't know what the book was trying to say either, but it's hard for me to give high marks to a text that creates more confusion and doesn't resolve it.
It's a good book to start if you want to have a wide understanding about educational psychology. What I like from this book is the "connect to others' part" things and "21st century skills" section. Also, there are a few activities that you can try--at class, if you are a teacher.
For a undergrad student, I recommend you to read "reflectively"--you read chapters by chapters by reflecting it with your own experiences.
Invaluable if you enter the classroom or simply want to understand students better as a parent or interested party. Clearly written, helpful, and broken down into manageable sections.
The only issue I had with this book was the fact that it looked like a dictionary, instead of a book. It helped me with theory and some tables were really good.