Educational Psychology Concepts Research and Challenges

Educational Psychology  Concepts  Research and Challenges
Author: Christine M. Rubie-Davies
Publsiher: Routledge
Total Pages: 289
Release: 2010-11-29
Genre: Education
ISBN: 9781136880759

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Research in educational psychology has had a huge impact in terms of enhancing understanding and challenging thinking about teachers and learners. Educational Psychology: Concepts, Research and Challenges brings together the latest research across many areas of educational psychology, introducing and reporting on the most effective methodologies for studying teachers and learners and providing overviews of current debates within the field. With chapters from international authors, this academic text reveals theoretical overviews and research findings from across the field including: teaching and learning research methods motivation and instruction curriculum – reading, writing, mathematics cognition special educational needs and behaviour management sociocultural and socioemotional perspectives assessment and evaluation. Educational psychology has historically had a focus on students with particular learning needs. This book provides a discussion about the gradual movement toward inclusion and the possibility of developing a more cohesive and potentially more effective education system for all students. It also provides recent research into effective behaviour management and presents specific and valuable techniques employed in applied behaviour analysis. The contributors also deliver analysis on the motivation of students and how home and society in general can contribute towards constraining or enhancing student learning. This book is a must-read for academics, researchers, undergraduate and graduate students who recognize the substantial contribution of educational psychology to increasing our understanding of students and their learning, teachers and their teaching.

Challenges and Innovations in Educational Psychology Teaching and Learning

Challenges and Innovations in Educational Psychology Teaching and Learning
Author: M Cecil Smith,Nancy DeFrates-Densch
Publsiher: IAP
Total Pages: 461
Release: 2016-04-01
Genre: Education
ISBN: 9781681233987

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Leading faculty members in educational psychology, who are expert classroom teachers, describe inherent difficulties encountered when teaching different subject matter in educational psychology to diverse populations of students, including undergraduate teacher candidates, psychology and child development majors, and graduate students in education and psychology. Educational psychology addresses subject matter as diverse as child and adolescent development, motivation, learning theories, student assessment, teacher expertise, and research methods and statistics. Drawing from their years of classroom experience, as well as their expertise in designing and conducting educational research, the contributing authors report their successful instructional efforts and innovations designed to increase student learning and knowledge of the discipline.

Teaching Challenges in Secondary Schools

Teaching Challenges in Secondary Schools
Author: Alyssa R. Gonzalez-DeHass,Patricia P. Willems
Publsiher: Rowman & Littlefield
Total Pages: 171
Release: 2017-09-13
Genre: Education
ISBN: 9781475828207

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This case study book serves as a valuable tool for professors and instructors of educational psychology. It contains 17 cases that represent current areas of interest in Educational Psychology embedded within current challenges that teachers face in today’s middle and high school classrooms. The cases are organized into six major parts: Human Development, Individual Differences and Diversity, Learning Theories, Motivation, Classroom Management, Instructional Approaches, and Assessment and Evaluation.Each case describes a detailed teaching scenario written from either the student or the teachers’ perspective. To engage students in critical thinking, perspective-taking, analysis, problem solving and decision-making, the cases have been intentionally written without a conclusion. Because the cases are open-ended, it allows the professor or instructor more flexibility and autonomy in how they use the cases. Each case is followed by thought-provoking questions, highlighting the significant issues in the case, from which to analyze the case and apply various theoretical viewpoints. While the cases do not replace actual classroom experience, they present a way to immerse students in the classroom’s culture by providing them with real-life teaching examples.

Contemporary Educational Psychology Concepts Issues Applications

Contemporary Educational Psychology  Concepts  Issues  Applications
Author: Robert C. Craig,William A. Mehrens,Harvey F. Clarizio
Publsiher: John Wiley & Sons
Total Pages: 558
Release: 1975-01-01
Genre: Educational psychology
ISBN: 0471183512

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Educational Psychology Practice

Educational Psychology Practice
Author: Thomas Szulevicz,Lene Tanggaard
Publsiher: Springer
Total Pages: 147
Release: 2016-09-20
Genre: Education
ISBN: 9783319442662

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This book sets out a proposal for applying psychological and educational psychology concepts to improve work with children and young people. It also suggests how some of the criticism aimed at pedagogical-psychology practice can be answered. In several respects educational psychology practice seems to be in a transition phase and could even be said to be suffering an identity crisis: educational establishments and education policy alike are looking for different skills than those the psychology profession traditionally provides, and people are generally questioning the relevance and applicability of pedagogical-psychological counseling. The book is based on the fundamental premise that good professional practice is contingent upon circumstances that allow practitioners to apply their knowledge, experience and skills in the specific encounter with a specific task. This means that the ability to act pragmatically and creatively is, and will increasingly be, an important skill not only for educational psychologists, but also for psychologists in general. In other words, psychologists must be able to contribute to tasks in new ways and new contexts when required. Intended primarily for students of psychology, school psychologists and other professional groups that provide counseling in schools, the book is also a valuable resource for the various groups that use pedagogical-psychology tools and insights in their work with children and young people.

Educational Psychology

Educational Psychology
Author: Thomas L. Good,Joel R. Levin
Publsiher: Routledge
Total Pages: 72
Release: 2003-07-30
Genre: Education
ISBN: 9781135585570

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First published in 2001. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.

Educational Psychology

Educational Psychology
Author: Richard D. Parsons,Stephanie Lewis Hinson,Deborah Sardo-Brown
Publsiher: Wadsworth Publishing Company
Total Pages: 537
Release: 2001
Genre: Child development
ISBN: 053455718X

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While covering the basic concepts of psychological theory as it applies to education, child development, human learning and behavior, classroom management and assessment, this text is written from the point of view that teaching is both an art and a science. It is the first text to offer a practitioner-researcher model of teaching in which both pre-service and in-service teachers learn to integrate observational skills and hypothesis testing into their classroom teaching as a way of constantly checking research and theory against demonstrated results. Based on the practice of Action Research, it challenges students to become critical thinkers both as immediate consumers of teacher training courses and later as classroom teachers.

Handbook on Teaching Educational Psychology

Handbook on Teaching Educational Psychology
Author: Donald J. Treffinger,J. Kent Davis,Richard E. Ripple
Publsiher: Academic Press
Total Pages: 368
Release: 2013-09-17
Genre: Education
ISBN: 9781483258638

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Handbook on Teaching Educational Psychology provides a wide-ranging survey of practices and problems in teaching educational psychology. This book evaluates and reviews the conceptual and methodological bases of the practices. Organized into four parts encompassing 15 chapters, this book begins with an overview of the general problems encountered by the educational psychologists and the techniques for attacking those problems. This text then tackles the problems of defining the boundaries and content educational psychology. Other chapters consider the methodological tools and issues that are employed by educational psychologists in studying educational problems. This book discusses as well the general conceptual and theoretical models that have influences instructional development and research in educational psychology. The final chapter deals with some of the main issues and developments in teaching educational psychology, organized to distinguish between the graduate and undergraduate levels of instruction. This book is a valuable resource for educational psychologists, teachers, and students.