Helping Students Learn in a Learner-Centered Environment

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A01=Terry Doyle
Author_Terry Doyle
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Category=JNM
Category=JNZ
Cheating
Classroom Assessment Techniques
Cumulative Exams
Current Learning Theory
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
facilitating student autonomy in college
Ferris State
Fixed Mind Set
Follow
formative assessment techniques
Give Students Choices
Held
higher education pedagogy
Independent
independent learning skills
learner-centered classrooms
Learnercentered Approach
Learnercentered Teaching
Lifelong Learning Skill
Long Term Memories
LTP
Nursing Faculty
peer collaboration methods
peer evaluation
peer teaching
Performance Assessments
Repertoire
self-regulated learning
Strongest
student engagement strategies
Successful Independent Learning
Timeline
Viewpoints
Wo
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9781579222222
  • Weight: 312g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 15 Sep 2008
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Before entering higher education, most students’ learning experiences have been traditional and teacher-centered. Their teachers have typically controlled their learning, with students having had little say about what and how to learn. For many students, encountering a learner-centered environment will be new, possibly unsettling, and may even engender resistance and hostility.Taking as his starting point students’ attitudes toward, and unfamiliarity with, learner-centered classrooms, Terry Doyle explains that motivating students to engage with this practice first of all requires explaining its underlying rationale, and then providing guidance on how to learn in this environment. This book is about how to help students acquire the new skills and knowledge they need to take on unfamiliar roles and responsibilities. It is informed by the author’s extensive experience in managing learner-centered classes, and by his consultation work with faculty.The first four chapters focus on the importance of imparting to students the evidence and underlying philosophy that is driving higher education to move from a teacher-centered to a learner-centered practice, and what this means for students in terms of having control over, and making important choices about, their learning. The final eight chapters focus on how to impart the skills that students need to learn or hone if they are to be effective learners in an environment that is new to them. The book covers such practices as learning on one’s own; creating meaningful learning when collaborating with others; peer teaching; making presentations; developing life long learning skills; self and peer evaluation; and give meaningful feedback.This book provides a rich and informative answer to the fundamental question: how do I help my students adjust to a learner-centered practice?

Terry Doyle is an author, nationally recognized educational consultant and Professor Emeritus of Ferris State University where he taught for 38 years. From 1998 to 2009 he served as the Senior Instructor for Faculty Development.Terry has shared his work on ways to use neuroscience, biology, and cognitive science research to develop a learner centered approach to teaching and training with the U.S. military, police agencies, medical and veterinary colleges and some 400 universities and colleges around the world for the past 25 years. He also has given hundreds of keynote addresses at regional, national and international conferences around the world.He is the author or co-author of seven books dealing with the application of neuroscience findings about how the brain learns and how to teach and train in harmony with the brain. Terry is the CEO of Learner Centered Teaching Consultants and D&M Consultants—The New Science of Business. John Tagg is Associate Professor of English at Palomar College in San Macros, California, and author of The Learning Paradigm College.

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