Teaching for successful intelligence : to increase student learning and achievement

書誌事項

Teaching for successful intelligence : to increase student learning and achievement

Robert J. Sternberg, Elena L. Grigorenko

Corwin Press, c2007

2nd ed

  • : pbk

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注記

Includes bibliographical references (p. 185-189) and index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

"This book will provide valuable assistance, organization, and vision to teachers for whom lesson planning is new or challenging!" -Stephen M. Bongiovi, English Department Chair Seaford High School, NY "I found myself engrossed, reading every word, and quite frankly, wishing for even more! Beyond a doubt, teachers will use this book!" -Ronald W. Poplau, Instructor Shawnee Mission Northwest High School, KS "A very useful addition to my teaching methodology! There is a need for this book." -J. Petrina McCarty-Puhl, Science Teacher Robert McQueen High School, Reno, NV Strengthen critical thinking skills with strategies that dramatically improve student performance! Coauthored by two internationally renowned educators and researchers, this resource helps teachers strengthen their classroom practice with lessons that promote successful intelligence-a set of abilities that allow students to adapt and succeed within their environment, make the most of their strengths, and learn to compensate for their weaknesses. The authors demonstrate how to design instructional units that help students apply successful intelligence to solve problems and make decisions. This research-based text also includes: Sample unit plans and 40 ready-to-use lessons illustrated with classroom examples Proven assessment techniques to promote the development of creative, analytical, and practical thinking skills Approaches to encourage both passive and active learning With teacher reflection activities and suggested homework for students, this resource is ideal for strengthening students' higher-order thinking abilities and raising overall academic performance!

目次

Preface Introduction About the Authors Part I. Understanding Successful Intelligence 1. What Is Successful Intelligence? A Grizzly Bear's Lunch Defining Successful Intelligence The Triarchy of Thinking Abilities Conclusion 2. Examining the Theory of Successful Intelligence Does Successful Intelligence Work in the Classroom? Why Are Conventional Notions of Intelligence Still Prevalent? 3. Successful Intelligence in Life and in School Successful Intelligence in Life: The Changing Demands of the Larger World Successful Intelligence in School: Giving Everybody a Fair Chance Part II. Building Successful Intelligence Abilities 4. Teaching for Analytical Thinking Problem Solving Lesson 1: Identify Problem Lesson 2: Allocate Resources Lesson 3: Represent and Organize Information Lesson 4: Formulate Strategy Lesson 5: Monitor Problem Solving Strategies Lesson 6: Evaluate Solutions Lesson 7: Additional Prompts for Analytical Thinking 5. Teaching for Creative Thinking The Investment View of Creativity: Buying Low and Selling High Balancing Analytical, Creative, and Practical Abilities Lesson 8: Redefine the Problem Lesson 9: Question and Analyze Assumptions Lesson 10: Sell Creative Ideas Lesson 11: Generate Ideas Lesson 12: Recognize the Two Faces of Knowledge Lesson 13: Identify and Surmount Obstacles Lesson 14: Take Sensible Risks Lesson 15: Tolerate Ambiguity Lesson 16: Build Self-Efficacy Lesson 17: Uncover True Interests Lesson 18: Delay Gratification Lesson 19: Model Creativity Lesson 20: Additional Prompts for Creative Thinking 6. Teaching for Practical Thinking Lesson 21: Become Motivated Lesson 22: Control Impulses Lesson 23: Persevere but Don't Perseverate Lesson 24: Use the Right Abilities Lesson 25: Act on a Plan Lesson 26: Become Oriented to Product Lesson 27: Complete Tasks Lesson 28: Make a Commitment Lesson 29: Take a Risk Lesson 30: Don't Procrastinate Lesson 31: Assign Responsibility Lesson 32: Manage Self-Pity Lesson 33: Be Independent Lesson 34: Handle Personal Difficulties Lesson 35: Concentrate Lesson 36: Schedule Accordingly Lesson 37: Set Priorities Lesson 38: Balance Thinking Skills Lesson 39: Develop Self-Confidence Lesson 40: Additional Prompts for Practical Thinking Part III. Developing Successful Intelligence Units 7. Framing Triarchic Instruction and Assessment Units The Nuts and Bolts of TIA What TIA Means What TIA Does Not Mean The Structure of TIA Units Pre-TIA Activities Designing a TIA Unit Implementing TIA 8. Putting It All Together: A Comprehensive Illustration of Lessons for Teaching for Successful Intelligence Introduction to Unit Unit Lesson 1: Introduction Unit Lesson 2: Analytical Unit Lesson 3: Practical Unit Lesson 4: Creative Unit Homework Unit Assessment Conclusion Appendix: Grade Level Activities References Index

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