Advances in instructional Psychology

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Black Blobs
Cartesian Connection
Cartesian Plane
Category=JNC
Circuit Behavior
cognitive process
Conceptual Retention
Decorative Illustrations
Dynamic Grapher
Electrical Circuits
Enable Students
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Explanative Illustrations
High Prior Knowledge Learners
High School Physics Students
Illustrations Work
instructional psychology
Learner's Cognitive System
Learner’s Cognitive System
Low Prior Knowledge Learners
modern literacy
Negative Half Planes
Organizational Illustrations
pedagogical skills
Pm Group
Prior Knowledge Learners
Problem Solving Transfer
Pump Passage
Series Parallel Circuits
Slope Sign
ThinkerTools Curriculum
TM Group

Product details

  • ISBN 9780805807097
  • Weight: 830g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Sep 1993
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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The contributors to this volume address reasoning and problem solving as fundamental to learning and teaching and to modern literacy. The research on expertise and the development of competence makes it clear that structures of knowledge and cognitive process should be tightly linked throughout education to attain high levels of ability. The longstanding pedagogical assumption that the attainment of useful knowledge proceeds from lower level learning based on the practice of fundamental skills that demand little thought, to higher level competence in which problem solving finally plays an increasing role, is no longer tenable. It is now clear that thinking is not an outcome of basic learning, but is part of the basic acquisition of knowledge and skill. In learning to read, for example, decoding the printed word and understanding simple texts is an act of problem solving, requiring inference and elaboration by the reader. The prevalence of reasoning with information at all levels makes the details of its involvement a fundamental influence on learning and instruction -- a recurring theme in each of the chapters.

A rich variety of topics is addressed including:

*an analysis of the components of teaching competence

*the evolution of a learner's mathematical understanding

*the use of causal models for generating scientific explanations

*the facilitation of meaningful learning through text illustrations

*the competence of children in argumentative interaction that results in conceptual change.

Editor Robert Glaser- Chairman of the Symposium of The Learning Rsearch and Development Center, University of Pittsburgh, USA.