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Howard Gardner – Teachers College Press, 2024
For over half a century, Howard Gardner has studied the mind in its various shapes, forms, and operations, culminating in his best-known work, the theory of multiple intelligences. This volume compiles his most compelling essays on the conduct, contours, and complexity of the human mind. After introducing the thinkers who had the greatest…
Descriptors: Learning Theories, Multiple Intelligences, Schemata (Cognition), Brain
Perry R. Rettig; Toni M. Bailey – Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2024
Parents want to work with their children's teachers to help them succeed in school. "What Brain Research Says about Student Learning" provides parents and teachers the most recent findings in brain research and learning theory in a very approachable way. The reader will see how the child's brain develops, learns, remembers, and creates…
Descriptors: Parent Teacher Cooperation, Brain, Cognitive Processes, Learning Theories
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Bailey, Richard – Interchange: A Quarterly Review of Education, 2020
It seems reasonable to suppose that educational practices should be informed by philosophical and scientific understandings of the character and operation of mental processes. Clark and Chambers' 1998 'The Extended Mind' is a seminal paper in the philosophy of mind, but has received limited attention by educational researchers. Their Extended Mind…
Descriptors: Educational Practices, Schemata (Cognition), Learning Processes, Criticism
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Clark, John – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2018
Increasingly, connections are being made between neuroscience and education. At their interface is the attempt to "bridge the gap between conscious minds and living brains." All too often, the two sides pursue a reductionist strategy of excluding the other. A middle way, promoted by Sankey in the context of values education, is…
Descriptors: Neurosciences, Epistemology, Cognitive Processes, Values Education
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Maiese, Michelle – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2017
Education theorists have emphasized that transformative learning is not simply a matter of students gaining access to new knowledge and information, but instead centers upon personal transformation: it alters students' perspectives, interpretations, and responses. How should learning that brings about this sort of self-transformation be understood…
Descriptors: Transformative Learning, Learning Theories, Human Body, Cognitive Processes
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Rodgers, Shannon – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2016
If educators presuppose that brain and mind are synonymous, perhaps it is out of necessity. Such an equivalency might be required in order for mind to be accessible, knowable and a "thing" like the brain is. Such a presupposition, that mind is a thing which we can understand nonetheless rests on an insecure foundation. As suggested by…
Descriptors: Figurative Language, Philosophy, Cognitive Processes, Brain
Çeliköz, Nadir; Erisen, Yavuz; Sahin, Mehmet – Online Submission, 2019
Why the brain is the most incredible network of information processing and interpretation in the body as we learn things is the scope of the Cognitive Learning Theories. When we use the word "learning", we usually mean "to think using the brain". Therefore, the basic concept of learning is the main viewpoint in the Cognitive…
Descriptors: Learning Theories, Information Processing, Cognitive Processes, Brain
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Crossland, John – Primary Science, 2015
Piaget's theories of the structure of knowledge, constructivist learning, and stages of development in thinking have been a cornerstone of cognitive psychology and teacher education for half a century (Piaget, 1983). More recently, his ideas about stages of cognitive development have received criticism from many quarters (Weiten, 1992), including…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Constructivism (Learning), Brain, Child Development
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Moghaddam, Alireza Navid; Araghi, Seyed Mahdi – English Language Teaching, 2013
Language learning process is one of the complicated behaviors of human beings which has called many scholars and experts' attention especially after the middle of last century by the advent of cognitive psychology that later on we see its implication to education. Unlike previous thought of schools, cognitive psychology deals with the way in which…
Descriptors: Second Language Learning, Brain, Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Psychology
Lancia, Kathleen A. St. Peters – ProQuest LLC, 2013
To best meet the needs of an increasingly diverse student population, we must develop an integrative writing pedagogy that is informed by what the cognitive and neurosciences have uncovered about learning so that our theories of learning and practices of instruction are consistent with our most current and accurate knowledge of the biological and…
Descriptors: Writing Instruction, Writing (Composition), Learning Theories, Brain
Phan, Huy P.; Ngu, Bing H. – Oxford University Press, 2019
"Teaching, Learning and Psychology" offers comprehensive coverage of contemporary psychological issues and new directions in education. With its focus on the non-deficit nature of human behaviours and positive psychology, the book emphasises the importance of appropriate pedagogical practices for effective learning. Comprehensive and…
Descriptors: Preservice Teacher Education, Children, Adolescents, Cognitive Development
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Schreiner, Mary B.; Rothenberger, Cynthia D.; Sholtz, A. Janae – Journal on Excellence in College Teaching, 2013
Faculty members in higher education are challenged to meet the needs of an increasingly learning-diverse student body. Neuroscience research indicates that individual variations in brain function affect each learner's ability to process and express information. Using this research as a foundation, the theory and principles of universal course…
Descriptors: College Faculty, College Students, Brain, Neurosciences
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Sutherland, Robert J.; Sparks, Fraser T.; Lehmann, Hugo – Neuropsychologia, 2010
The properties of retrograde amnesia after damage to the hippocampus have been explicated with some success using a rat model of human medial temporal lobe amnesia. We review the results of this experimental work with rats focusing on several areas of consensus in this growing literature. We evaluate the theoretically significant hypothesis that…
Descriptors: Memory, Animals, Cues, Brain Hemisphere Functions
Ali, Tanzeem Iqbal – ProQuest LLC, 2013
A neo-culture of extra-curricular coaching prior to sitting the terminal exam was once the privileged domain of public education systems in the Eastern world, but this is no longer the case. This multi-phase study based on a grounded theory approach considered a diversity of physics learning experiences of students and alumni from two urban…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Grounded Theory, Physics, Science Instruction
Weiss, Palumbo Ruth – Training & Development, 2000
The more neuroscientists explore how the brain processes, stores, and retrieves information, the more evident is the connection between emotion and reason. Scientists have discovered that the same areas of the brain that are involved in processing emotion are involved in processing memory. (Author/JOW)
Descriptors: Adults, Brain, Cognitive Processes, Learning Theories
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