Author: Jeanine Mary Williamson
Publisher: Chandos Publishing
Published: 2017-08-11
Total Pages: 188
ISBN-13: 0081018827
DOWNLOAD EBOOK →Teaching to Individual Differences in Science and Engineering Librarianship: Adapting Library Instruction to Learning Styles and Personality Characteristics applies learning styles and personality characteristics to science and engineering library instruction. After introducing the idea that individuals tend to choose college majors and occupations in alignment with their learning style and personality characteristics, the book presents background on the Kolb Learning Styles model, the 16 PF (Personality Factor) framework, and the Big Five/Narrow Traits personality framework. It then reviews extant knowledge on the learning styles and personality characteristics of scientists, engineers and librarians. Next, the book considers general approaches to the personalization of instruction to learning styles and personality characteristics, opportunities for such personalization in science and engineering library instruction, and science and engineering librarian attitudes towards, and approaches to, this type of personalization of instruction. Considers teaching and individual differences within science and engineering librarianship Offers a balanced and critical account of the adaptation of library instruction to learning styles and personality characteristics Cites the dynamic instruction/adaptive teaching literature Discusses opportunities and suggestions for incorporating personalization into science and engineering library instruction
Author: David H. Jonassen
Publisher: Routledge
Published: 2012-12-06
Total Pages: 483
ISBN-13: 1136480994
DOWNLOAD EBOOK →Written for teachers, trainers, and instructional designers -- anyone who is responsible for designing or preparing instruction -- this book begins with one basic premise: individual differences mediate learning at all levels and in all situations. That is, some learners find it easier or more difficult to learn some skills or to learn from certain forms of instruction because they vary in terms of aptitude, cognitive styles, personality, or learning styles. This volume describes most of the major differences in a readable and accessible way and demonstrates how to design various forms of instruction and predict the ease with which learners will acquire different skills. Most books that discuss any learner differences focus on those that characterize special education populations, whereas this book focuses on normal learners. Designed as a handbook, this volume is structured to provide easy and consistent access to information and answers, and prescriptions and hypotheses. When definitive answers are not possible because there is no research documentation, the authors suggest theories designed to stimulate future research.
Author: Guy Bond
Publisher:
Published: 1948-02-26
Total Pages: 89
ISBN-13: 9780816671250
DOWNLOAD EBOOK →Adapting Instruction in Reading to Individual Differences was first published in 1948. Minnesota Archive Editions uses digital technology to make long-unavailable books once again accessible, and are published unaltered from the original University of Minnesota Press editions.Number 5 in the Series on Individualization of InstructionThis bulletin acquaints the teacher with the extent and nature of individual differences in reading, and with the causes of these differences, and emphasizes the need and describes the procedures for individualization of instruction. The psychological and physiological causes of these differences are discussed in detail and clearly illustrated with case histories. Complete, extremely helpful suggestions to aid the teacher in recognizing the differing abilities of children and in adapting the instruction to the differences are offered.
Author: Deborah Burnett Strother
Publisher:
Published: 1986
Total Pages: 298
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOK →Grade level: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, k, p, e, i.
Author: David H. Jonassen
Publisher: Routledge
Published: 2012-12-06
Total Pages: 521
ISBN-13: 1136481060
DOWNLOAD EBOOK →Written for teachers, trainers, and instructional designers -- anyone who is responsible for designing or preparing instruction -- this book begins with one basic premise: individual differences mediate learning at all levels and in all situations. That is, some learners find it easier or more difficult to learn some skills or to learn from certain forms of instruction because they vary in terms of aptitude, cognitive styles, personality, or learning styles. This volume describes most of the major differences in a readable and accessible way and demonstrates how to design various forms of instruction and predict the ease with which learners will acquire different skills. Most books that discuss any learner differences focus on those that characterize special education populations, whereas this book focuses on normal learners. Designed as a handbook, this volume is structured to provide easy and consistent access to information and answers, and prescriptions and hypotheses. When definitive answers are not possible because there is no research documentation, the authors suggest theories designed to stimulate future research.
Author: Charles R. Dills
Publisher: Educational Technology
Published: 1997
Total Pages: 936
ISBN-13: 9780877782940
DOWNLOAD EBOOK →An encyclopedic examination of competing paradigms in the areas of instructional design and development at all levels and in a variety of environments. The 46 treatments feature the analysis of experienced scholars and sometimes the authors of the particular theories under discussion which include topics in instructional development in its philosophical mode (constructivism, postmodernism, systems approach), as a cultural vantage point, and in theory and application reviewing the effects of technology on class design, the influences of semiotics, the strategic advantages of constructivist instruction versus linear designs, and modeling for applying design strategies from constructivism and cognitive theory to individualizing instruction with adult learners. Annotation copyrighted by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR
Author: Peter Robinson
Publisher: John Benjamins Publishing
Published: 2002-09-27
Total Pages: 399
ISBN-13: 9027297517
DOWNLOAD EBOOK →Second language learners differ in how successfully they adapt to, and profit from, instruction. This book aims to show that adaptation to L2 instruction, and subsequent L2 learning, is a result of the interaction between learner characteristics and learning contexts. Describing and explaining these interactions is fundamentally important to theories of instructed SLA, and for effective L2 pedagogy. This collection is the first to explore this important issue in contemporary task-based, immersion, and communicative pedagogic settings. In the first section, leading experts in individual differences research describe recent advances in theories of intelligence, L2 aptitude, motivation, anxiety and emotion, and the relationship of native language abilities to L2 learning. In the second section, these theoretical insights are applied to empirical studies of individual differences-treatment interactions in classroom learning, experimental studies of the effects of focus on form and incidental learning, and studies of naturalistic versus instructed SLA.