This book presents an innovative approach to teaching that helps students acquire and use knowledge in ways that go beyond rote memorization of facts and figures--to develop a level of understanding that will serve them well throughout their lives. Based on a six-year collaborative research project of school teachers and researchers from the Harvard Graduate School of Education, the book describes what teaching for understanding looks like in the classroom, and examines how teachers have learned to use it.
Part One: Foundations of Teaching for Understanding
1. Why Do We Need a Pedagogy of Understanding?
Vito Perrone
2. What is Understanding?
David Perkins
Part Two: Teaching for Understanding in the Classroom
3. What is Teaching for Understanding?
Martha Stone Wiske
4. How Do Teachers Learn to Teach for Understanding?
Martha Stone Wiske, Karen Hammerness, Daniel Gray Wilson
5. How Does Teaching for Understanding Look in Practice?
Ron Ritchart, Martha Stone Wiske, Eric Buchovecky, Lois Hetland
Part Three: Students' Understanding in the Classroom
6. What Are the Qualities of Understanding?
Veronica Boix Mansilla, Howard Gardner
7. How Do Students Demonstrate Understanding?
Lois Hetland, Karen Hammerness, Chris Unger, Daniel Gray Wilson
8. What Do Students in Teaching for Understanding Classrooms Understand?
Karen Hammerness, Rosario Jaramillo, Chris Unger, Daniel Gray Wilson
9. What Do Students Think About Understanding?
Chris Unger and Daniel Gray Wilson with Rosario Jaramillo and Roger Dempsey
Part Four: Promoting Teaching for Understanding
10. How Can We Prepare New Teachers?
Vito Perrone
11. How Can Teaching for Understanding Be ExtAnded in Schools?
Martha Stone Wiske, Lois Hetland, Eric Buchovecky
Conclusion: Melding Progressive and Traditional Perspectives
Howard Gardner
Martha Stone Wiske is a lecturer and researcher at the Harvard Graduate School of Education where she co-directs the Educational Techono
This book presents an innovative approach to teaching that helps students acquire and use knowledge in ways that go beyond rote memorization of facts and figures--to develop a level of understanding that will serve them well throughout their lives. Based on a six-year collaborative research project of school teachers and researchers from the Harvard Graduate School of Education, the book describes what teaching for understanding looks like in the classroom, and examines how teachers have learned to use it.
Part One: Foundations of Teaching for Understanding
1. Why Do We Need a Pedagogy of Understanding?
Vito Perrone
2. What is Understanding?
David Perkins
Part Two: Teaching for Understanding in the Classroom
3. What is Teaching for Understanding?
Martha Stone Wiske
4. How Do Teachers Learn to Teach for Understanding?
Martha Stone Wiske, Karen Hammerness, Daniel Gray Wilson
5. How Does Teaching for Understanding Look in Practice?
Ron Ritchart, Martha Stone Wiske, Eric Buchovecky, Lois Hetland
Part Three: Students' Understanding in the Classroom
6. What Are the Qualities of Understanding?
Veronica Boix Mansilla, Howard Gardner
7. How Do Students Demonstrate Understanding?
Lois Hetland, Karen Hammerness, Chris Unger, Daniel Gray Wilson
8. What Do Students in Teaching for Understanding Classrooms Understand?
Karen Hammerness, Rosario Jaramillo, Chris Unger, Daniel Gray Wilson
9. What Do Students Think About Understanding?
Chris Unger and Daniel Gray Wilson with Rosario Jaramillo and Roger Dempsey
Part Four: Promoting Teaching for Understanding
10. How Can We Prepare New Teachers?
Vito Perrone
11. How Can Teaching for Understanding Be ExtAnded in Schools?
Martha Stone Wiske, Lois Hetland, Eric Buchovecky
Conclusion: Melding Progressive and Traditional Perspectives
Howard Gardner
Martha Stone Wiske is a lecturer and researcher at the Harvard Graduate School of Education where she co-directs the Educational Techono
Part One: Foundations of Teaching for Understanding.
1. Why Do We Need a Pedagogy of Understanding?(Vito Perrone).
2. What is Understanding?(David Perkins).
Part Two: Teaching for Understanding in the Classroom.
3. What is Teaching for Understanding?(Martha Stone Wiske).
4. How Do Teachers Learn to Teach for Understanding?(Martha Stone
Wiske, Karen Hammerness, Daniel Gray Wilson).
5. How Does Teaching for Understanding Look in Practice?(Ron
Ritchart, Martha Stone Wiske, Eric Buchovecky, Lois Hetland).
Part Three: Students' Understanding in the Classroom.
6. What Are the Qualities of Understanding?(Veronica Boix Mansilla,
Howard Gardner).
7. How Do Students Demonstrate Understanding?(Lois Hetland, Karen
Hammerness, Chris Unger, Daniel Gray Wilson).
8. What Do Students in Teaching for Understanding Classrooms
Understand?(Karen Hammerness, Rosario Jaramillo, Chris Unger,
Daniel Gray Wilson).
9. What Do Students Think About Understanding?(Chris Unger and
Daniel Gray Wilson with Rosario Jaramillo and Roger Dempsey).
Part Four: Promoting Teaching for Understanding.
10. How Can We Prepare New Teachers?(Vito Perrone).
11. How Can Teaching for Understanding Be Extended in
Schools?(Martha Stone Wiske, Lois Hetland, Eric Buchovecky).
Conclusion: Melding Progressive and Traditional Perspectives(Howard
Gardner).
MARTHA STONE WISKE is a lecturer and researcher at the Harvard Graduate School of Education where she co-directs the Educational Techonology Center. She is the coeditor of Software Goes to School: Teaching for Understanding with New Technologies (1995).
"This book is equal parts theory and practice. It is a superb
example of what educators in universities and schools can
accomplish when they engage in sincere efforts to benefit
students." --Association for Supervision and Curriculum
Development
"A remarkable work, conceptually bold and practical. It makes the
best of contemporary practices seem eminently reasonable, while
also offering a framework for making teaching for understanding
accessible to our teachers." --Deborah Meier, author of The Power
of Their Ideas and founder, Central Park East Public Schools, East
Harlem, New York
"At last, a new volume from a team of scholars at Harvard's
Graduate School of Education and Project Zero that takes teaching,
learning, and understanding, as both theory and practice. My
congratulations to Howard Gardner, David Perkins, and Vito Perrone
for a project well-conceived and well-conducted, and to Stone Wiske
for a useful, educator-friendly book." --Lee S. Shulman, president,
Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching
"As the authors acknowledge, teaching for understanding is an old
idea and a simple one. But their lucid and thorough exploration of
it is fresh and richly generative--and compelling too, in a way
reserved for ideas that seem as practical as they are provocative.
A whole range of people who care about teaching will be drawn to
this book, and they will be well served." --Joe McDonald, director
of research, Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown
University
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