Promoting spontaneous use of learning and reasoning strategies : theory, research, and practice for effective transfer
著者
書誌事項
Promoting spontaneous use of learning and reasoning strategies : theory, research, and practice for effective transfer
(Routledge research in achievement and gifted education)
Routledge, 2018
- : pbk
- : hbk
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注記
Includes bibliographical references and index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
In this book, scholars from around the world develop viable answers to the question of how it may be possible to promote students' spontaneity in the use of learning and reasoning strategies. They combine their expertise to put forward new theories and models for understanding the underlying mechanisms; provide details of new research to address pertinent questions and problems; and describe classroom practices that have proven successful in promoting spontaneous strategy use. This book is a must for educators and researchers who truly care that schooling should cultivate learning and reasoning strategies in students that would prepare and serve them for life.
A seminal resource, this book will address the basic problem that many educators are well acquainted with: that students can learn how to effectively use learning and reasoning strategies but not use them of their own volition or in settings other than the one in which they learned the strategies.
目次
Introduction (Emmanuel Manalo, Yuri Uesaka, & Clark Chinn)
Part 1: Theory
1. Eliciting and Building upon Student-Generated Solutions: Evidence from Productive Failure (Manu Kapur, Ngan Hoe Lee, & June Lee)
2. Promoting Learners' Spontaneous Use of Effective Questioning: Integrating Research Findings Inside and Outside of Japan (Yoshinori Oyama)
3. Learning from multiple documents: How can we foster multiple document literacy skills in a sustainable way? (Marc Stadtler, Rainer Bromme, & Jean-Francois Rouet)
4. How to Address Student's Lack of Spontaneity in Diagram Use: Eliciting Educational Principles for the Promotion of Spontaneous Learning Strategy Use in General (Yuri Uesaka & Emmanuel Manalo)
5. Obstacles to the Use of Learning Strategies after Training (and Some Approaches to Overcome Them) (Christof Wecker & Andreas Hetmanek)
Part 2: Research
6. Second Language Vocabulary Learning: Are Students Cognitive Misers and, If So, Why? (Emmanuel Manalo & Marcus Henning)
7. The Effect of Teaching Styles on Students' Learning Strategy Use and Interest in Studying Science (Etsuko Tanaka)
8. Effects of Students' Perceptions of Test Value and Motivation for Learning on Learning Strategy Use in Mathematics (Masayuki Suzuki & Yuan Sun)
9. Applying Metacognition Theory to the Classroom: Decreasing Illusion of Knowing to Promote Learning Strategy Use (Tatsushi Fukaya)
10. Preparatory Learning Behaviors for English as a Second Language Learning: The Effects of Teachers' Teaching Behaviors During Classroom Lessons (Keita Shinogaya)
11. Developing Regulation Strategies through Computer-Supported Knowledge Building among Tertiary Students (Chunlin Lei & Carol Chan)
Part 3: Practice
12. Three Approaches to Promoting Spontaneous Use of Learning Strategies: Bridging the Gap Between Research and School Practices (Shin'ichi Ichikawa, Yuri Uesaka, & Emmanuel Manalo)
13. Coding Dosage of Teachers' Implementation of Activities Using ICAP: A Video Analysis (Glenda S. Stump, Na Li, Seokmin Kang, David Yaghmourian, Dongchen Xu, Joshua Adams, Katherine L. McEldoon, Matthew Lancaster, and Michelene T. H. Chi)
14. Development and Improvement of a Learning Strategy Use Enhancement Program: Use of Lesson Induction and Elaboration Strategies (Mikiko Seo, Mengting Wang, Takeshi Ishizaki, Yuri Uesaka, & Shin'ichi Ichikawa)
15. Epistemic Design: Design to Promote Transferable Epistemic Growth in the PRACCIS Project (Clark Chinn, Ravit Golan Duncan, & Ronald Rinehart)
16. Exploring the scope and boundaries of inquiry strategies: What do young learners generalize from inquiry-based life science learning? (Ala Samarapungavan, Jamison Wills, & Lynn Bryan)
17. PMC2E: Conceptual Representations to Promote Transfer (Cindy Hmelo-Silver, Rebecca Jordan, Suparna Sinha, Yawen Yu, & Catherine Eberbach)
18. Dude, Don't Start Without Me! Fostering Engagement with Others' Mathematical Ideas (Noreen M. Webb, Megan L. Franke, Nicholas C. Johnson, Angela C. Turrou, and Marsha Ing)
19. Supporting Teachers' Spontaneous Use of Talk Moves During Inquiry Dialogue (Alina Reznitskaya, Ian A. G. Wilkinson, & Joseph Oyler)
Conclusion (Emmanuel Manalo, Yuri Uesaka, & Clark Chinn)
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