Nature and Nurture of Learners

£4.99

Nature and Nurture of Learners

From the Perspective of Educational Psychology

Sociology Psychology Education

Author: Meryl Englander

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Language: English

Published by: AuthorHouse

Published on: 21st April 2010

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 905 Kb

ISBN: 9781449083298


Prospective and in-service teachers are the intended readers of this book.

Teaching involves much more then dispensing knowledge. Teaching is a process of arranging activities that will enable individuals to learn and behave appropriately. The appropriateness of the activities depends on the degree they interact with the status of the targeted individuals.

Understanding the nature of learners

Just as physicians need to know about the nature of the human body and carpenters need to now about the nature of wood, teachers need to know about the nature of people that is related to learning and behavior. Thereby, the focus of this text is the relevant personal characteristics: the intellect, motivation, and sense of self each of which influence learning and behavior. Research findings and models within educational psychology are used to define the relevant human personal characteristics.

Setting objectives and designing activities

In order to arrange meaningful activities teachers strive to achieve selected objectives. The text identifies four broad objectives within which specific lesson objectives can be identified. The objectives themselves and more particularly the proposed activities must be oriented around the personal characteristics of the targeted learners.

Understanding learner qualifications

Age, grade level, ethnic background, and gender are insufficient indicators of learner qualifications. Relevant information for learning are within individual learners as exhibited through behavior. Observations are the key indicators of learner readiness to learn. The text recommends that students begin now to develop skills for identifying the status of learners and classroom conditions through interviews, noting various classroom behaviors, and analyzing the findings by developing portfolios.

Promoting collaborative learning

Small group discussions are encouraged so that students can share skills in analyzing real problems and thereby develop habits and skills for working with colleagues.

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