1st Edition

Teaching for Student Learning Becoming an Accomplished Teacher

By Dick Arends, Ann Kilcher Copyright 2010
    456 Pages
    by Routledge

    480 Pages
    by Routledge

    Teaching for Student Learning: Becoming an Accomplished Teacher shows teachers how to move from novice to expert status by integrating both research and the wisdom of practice into their teaching. It emphasizes how accomplished teachers gradually acquire and apply a broad repertoire of evidence-based teaching practices in the support of student learning.

    The book’s content stems from three major fields of study: 1) theories and research on how people learn, including new insights from the cognitive and neurosciences; 2) research on classroom practices shown to have the greatest effect on student learning; and 3) research on effective schooling, defined as school-level factors that enhance student achievement and success. Although the book’s major focus is on teaching, it devotes considerable space to describing how students learn and how the most effective and widely-used models of teaching connect to principles of student learning. Specifically, it describes how research on teaching, cognition, and neuroscience converge to provide an evidence-based "science of learning" which teachers can use to advance their practice. Key features include the following:

    Evidence-Based Practice – This theme is developed through: 1) an ongoing review and synthesis of research on teaching and learning and the resulting guidelines for practice and 2) boxed research summaries within the chapters.

    Instructional Repertoire Theme – Throughout the book teaching is viewed as an extremely complex activity that requires a repertoire of instructional strategies that, once mastered, can be drawn upon to fit specific classrooms and teaching situations.

    Standards-based School Environments – Education today is dominated by standards-based school environments. Unlike competing books, this one describes these environments and shows how they impact curriculum design and learning activities. The objective is to show how teachers can make standards-based education work for them.

    Pedagogical Features – In addition to an end-of-book glossary, each chapter contains research boxes, reflection boxes, itemized end-of-chapter summaries, and end-of-chapter learning activities.

    Website – An accompanying website contains a variety of field-oriented and site-based activities that teachers can do alone or with colleagues.

    1. Teaching and Learning in Today’s Schools
    Part I. Foundations for Student Learning
    2. How Students Learn: A Primer
    3. Motivation and Student Learning
    4. Curriculum Design for Student Learning
    5. Instructional Differentiation
    6. Classroom Assessment
    Part II. Methods and Models of Teaching
    7. Presentation and Explanation
    8. Direct Instruction
    9. Teaching with Text, Internet and Visual Media
    10. Teaching Thinking
    11. Concept and Inquiry-based Teaching
    12. Cased-based Teaching and Jurisprudential Inquiry
    13. Cooperative Learning
    14. Problem-based Learning
    Part III. School-wide Conditions for Student Learning
    15. School Change and Teacher Learning

    Biography

    Richard Arends is Emeritus Professor of Education and former Dean of the School of Education at Central Connecticut St. University.

    Ann Kilcher is President of Paideia Consulting Group, Inc., based in Halifax, Nova Scotia.

    "Arends and Kilcher engage the reader in each chapter and provide reader-friendly knowledge and research that can be used by multiple audiences. Recommended for all readership levels."CHOICE

     

    "Arends and Kilcher provide an excellent book for experienced teachers to improve on their teaching practices. …This book is a great resource on learning for any educator. Even though novice teachers do not have the experience, they could still benefit from all of the solid researched-based information this book provides on learning for both students and the teacher. This book would make a great textbook for a graduate level education course."Education Review