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Handbook of Academic Learning: Construction of Knowledge (Educational Psychology) PDF

633 Pages·1997·30.66 MB·English
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HANDBOOK OF Academic Learning Construction of Knowledge This is a volume in the Academic Press EDUCATIONAL PSYCHOLOGY SERIES Critical comprehensive reviews of research knowledge, theories, principles, and practices Under the editorship of Gary D. Phye HANDBOOK O F Academic Learning Constmction of Knowledge EDITED BY Gary D,P hye Department of Psychology Iowa State University Ames, Iowa ACADEMIC PRESS San Diego London Boston New York Sydney Tokyo Toronto Background image (cid:14)9 1993 Color Bytes, Inc. Inset image O 1995 PhotoDisc, Inc. This book is printed on acid-flee paper. (~ Copyright (cid:14)9 1997 by ACADEMIC PRESS All Rights Reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopy, recording, or any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher. Academic Press, Inc. 525 B Street, Suite 1900, San Diego, California 92101-4495, USA http://www.apnet.com Academic Press Limited 24-28 Oval Road, London NW! 7DX, UK http ://w w w. hbuk .co. u k/ap/ Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Handbook of academic learning / edited by Gary D. Phye. p. cm. -- (The educational psychology series) Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 0-12-554255-0 (case: aik. paper) ISBN 0-12-665256-9 (paper: alk. paper) 1. Learning, Psychology of. 2. Constructivism (Education) 3. Thought and thinking--Study and teaching. I. Phye, Gary D. II. Series: Educational psychology. LB 1060.H3456 1996 96-8681 CIP PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA 96 97 98 99 00 01 BC 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Contents Contributors xix Preface xxiii Academic Learning Perspectives, Theory, and Models 1. THE SOCIAL CONSTRUCTION OF LEARNING Eric Bredo Introduction 3 Functional Psychology 6 James 7 Dewey 10 Mead 12 Implications 14 Behaviorism 16 Watson 17 Skinner 18 Implications 20 Cognitivism 22 Chomsky 23 Bruner 25 Simon 26 vi Contents Implications 29 Situated Learning 31 Dreyfus 32 Vygotsky 34 Lave 36 Implications 38 Conclusions 39 References 42 2. LEARNING AND REMEMBERING: THE BASIS FOR PERSONAL KNOWLEDGE CONSTRUCTION Gary D. Phye Theory and Practice 47 Classroom Learning 49 Academic Content and Classroom Learning 49 Learning Episodes 49 Remembering 50 Personal Knowledge Construction 50 The Student-Environment Fit 50 What is Knowledge? 51 Knowledge Processing 52 What Is a Knowledge Domain? 53 Knowledge Assessment 54 Remembering 55 Is Remembering Automatic? 57 Using Knowledge 57 Automatization 58 Remembering and Academic Problem Solving 58 Classroom Scenario 59 Developing a Problem-Solving Environment 60 Training-for-Transfer 60 Training 61 Delayed Transfer Task 61 Promoting Personal Knowledge Construction 62 References 64 3. SCHOOL LEARNING AND MOTIVATION Myron H. Dembo and Martin J. Eaton Perspectives on Motivation 66 Contents vii Overview of the Model 68 Social and Cultural Factors 70 Classroom Contextual Factors 73 Internal Factors 79 Teacher-Directed Interventions 85 Task Dimension 86 Authority Dimension 88 Recognition Dimension 88 Grouping Dimension 90 Evaluation Dimension 90 Time Dimension 90 Student Self-Regulation Strategies Mood Control (Self-Talk) 91 Goal Setting 93 Concentration and Attention 95 Time Management 96 Procrastination 97 Summary 98 References 99 4. SELF~REGULATORY DIMENSIONS OF ACADEMIC LEARNING AND MOTIVATION Barry J. Zimmerman and Rafael Risemberg Self-Regulation of Achievers and Underachievers 106 Dimensions of Academic Self-Regulation 107 Research on Self-Regulatory Beliefs and Processes 110 Self-Motivational Techniques 111 Self-Regulatory Methods and Time Management 113 Self-Regulation of Performance 117 Regulating One's Own Physical and Social Environment 118 Conclusion 121 References 121 5. CONSTRUCTING THE CONCEPT OF APTITUDE: IMPLICATIONS FOR THE ASSESSMENT OF ANALOGICAL REASONING Paul D. Nichols and David J. Mittelholtz Changing Conceptualization of Aptitude 128 Aptitude before the 20th Century 129 Aptitude in the Early 20th Century 129 viii Contents Aptitude in the Late 20th Century 130 Aptitude in the 21 st Century 13 I Current Approaches to the Assessment of Analogical Reasoning 135 EPM Conceptualization and Measurement of Analogical Reasoning 135 IP Conceptualization and Measurement of Analogical Reasoning 136 New Directions in Assessing Analogical Reasoning 139 New Conceptualization of Analogical Reasoning 139 Emerging Conceptualization of Analogical Reasoning 140 Revised Assessment of Analogical Reasoning 142 Conclusion 143 References 144 II Teaching "How to Learn" within Domains 6. ELEMENTARY READING INSTRUCTION Michael Pressley, Ruth Wharton-McDonald, Joan Rankin, Pamela B. EI-Dinary, Rachel Brown, Peter Afflerbach, Jennifer Mistretta, and Linda Yokoi Excellent Reading as Constructively Responsive Reading 152 The Information Processing Components That Interact to Produce Constructively Responsive Reading 153 Brain Mechanisms 153 Articulating the Components of Constructive Information Processing 159 Constructively Responsive Reading as an End in the Development of Reading 160 Emergent Reading during the Preschool Years: Promoting the Development of Language Competence 161 Phonemic Awareness: An Important Metalinguistic Competence That Can Be Developed through Instruction during Kindergarten and Grade 1 163 Experimental Research on Primary-Grades Instruction: Whole Language versus Explicit Teaching of Decoding 165 Whole Language 165 Explicit Decoding Instruction 166 The Great Debate Continues 168 Comprehension Strategies Instruction 168 Instructional Studies of Individual Comprehension Strategies 168 Contents ix Instructional Studies of Repertoires of Comprehension Strategies 170 Descriptive Studies of Educator-Devised Comprehension Strategies Instruction 173 Summary 175 What Excellent Elementary Literacy Teachers Do 176 Primary-Grades Teaching 177 Grade 5 Instruction 181 Summary 185 Postscript for the Elementary Years 186 References 188 7. A COGNITIVE PERSPECTIVE ON THE ASSESSMENT, DIAGNOSIS, AND REMEDIATION OF READING SKILLS James M. Royer An Overview of the LATAS Model of Assessment and Educational Intervention 200 The Theoretical Underpinnings of the LATAS Diagnoses and Interventions 202 Five Characteristics of Teacher-Useful Reading Diagnosis and Remediation 204 Reliability and Validity of LATAS Procedures 204 Consistency between Reading Development Theory and LATAS Assessments 206 Profiles of Reading Skills Provided by LATAS Assessments 208 The Results of Instructional Interventions Based on LATAS Assessments 215 Case Study 1: JS 216 Case Study 2: GC 222 Case Study 3: JB 226 Other Intervention Strategies Used at LATAS 229 User-Friendly Properties of the LATAS Procedures 230 Teacher-Friendly Properties of SVT Tests 230 The Open-Ended Architecture of CAAS 230 Final Comments 231 References 232 8. PSYCHOLOGICAL FOUNDATIONS OF ELEMENTARY WRITING INSTRUCTION Stephen L. Benton Endogenous Development 236

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