FINALIST FOR _FOREWORD MAGAZINE'S_ 2011 BOOK OF THE YEAR
With his knack for making science intelligible for the layman, and his
ability to illuminate scientific concepts through analogy and
reference to personal experience, James Zull offers the reader an
engrossing and coherent introduction to what neuroscience can tell us
about cognitive development through experience, and its implications
for education.
Stating that educational change is underway and that the time is ripe
to recognize that “the primary objective of education is to
understand human learning” and that “all other objectives depend
on achieving this understanding”, James Zull challenges the reader
to focus on this purpose, first for her or himself, and then for those
for whose learning they are responsible.
The book is addressed to all learners and educators – to the reader
as self-educator embarked on the journey of lifelong learning, to the
reader as parent, and to readers who are educators in schools or
university settings, as well as mentors and trainers in the workplace.
In this work, James Zull presents cognitive development as a journey
taken by the brain, from an organ of organized cells, blood vessels,
and chemicals at birth, through its shaping by experience and
environment into potentially to the most powerful and exquisite force
in the universe, the human mind.
Zull begins his journey with sensory-motor learning, and how that
leads to discovery, and discovery to emotion. He then describes how
deeper learning develops, how symbolic systems such as language and
numbers emerge as tools for thought, how memory builds a knowledge
base, and how memory is then used to create ideas and solve problems.
Along the way he prompts us to think of new ways to shape educational
experiences from early in life through adulthood, informed by the
insight that metacognition lies at the root of all learning.
At a time when we can expect to change jobs and careers frequently
during our lifetime, when technology is changing society at break-neck
speed, and we have instant access to almost infinite information and
opinion, he argues that self-knowledge, awareness of how and why we
think as we do, and the ability to adapt and learn, are critical to
our survival as individuals; and that the transformation of education,
in the light of all this and what neuroscience can tell us, is a key
element in future development of healthy and productive societies.
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781579226060
Publisert
2016
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Vendor
Routledge
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter