You are here

Supporting the Spirit of Learning
Share
Share

Supporting the Spirit of Learning
When Process Is Content


January 1997 | 264 pages | Corwin

"How will the traditional skillset of the industrial era have to be expanded for successful workers and citizens in the knowledge era? How must the traditional education process be transformed? Two cornerstones to the new system of education will be elevating the learning process to comparable standing with the content of what is learned, and making high-level thinking and learning skills, like systems thinking and collaborative learning, as important as traditional skills of reductionistic thinking and individual problem solving. These could indeed be two elements of a 'thought revolution in education."
From the Foreword by Peter M. Senge, Center for Organizational Learning
Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Supporting the Spirit of Learning presents a powerful case for making the learning process the major focus of the curriculum. Curriculum-the heart and soul of teaching-has too often remained an overlooked component of school reform. The editors believe a new way of learning is necessary in order to develop the skills needed in today's interdependent world. This new framework encourages lifelong learning, systems thinking, and teamwork. Teaching specific disciplines reinforces the all-important teaching of processes and skills such as critical thinking, problem solving, and information processing. The chapter authors of this study describe how curriculum, evaluation and assessment, and involving parents and technology would be different if process and not content were the primary focus of learning.

Chapters explore the changes in preservice and inservice training needed to support process-centered education. The role of educator shifts from information provider to that of catalyst, coach, innovator, researcher, and collaborator with the learner throughout the learning process. Tomorrow's workplaces will require flexible, multiskilled, continuously learning employees.

To achieve that goal, process-based learning focuses on:

  • Developing critical thinking skills
  • Implementing self-assessment exercises, integral to learning
  • Offering students opportunities to actively acquire knowledge for themselves
  • Creating learning environments that develop cooperative problem solving
  • Learning skills in the context of real problems
  • Cultivating learner-centered, teacher-directed management
  • Creating outcomes that ensure all students have learned to think

Written for school administrators, teachers, staff developers, curriculum staff, and the faculty of teacher preparation, Supporting the Spirit of Learning is the second volume of a trilogy addressing the curriculum needs for the 21st century.


Peter M Senge
Foreword
Arthur L Costa and Rosemarie M Liebmann
Preface
Reuven Feuerstein, Rafi Feuerstein, and Yaron Schur
Process as Content in Education of Exceptional Children
Vito Perrone and Bena Kallick
Generative Topics for Process Curriculum
Arthur L Costa
Teaching as Process
Marion Leibowitz
Instruction for Process Learning
Marilyn Tabor
A Process-Oriented Paradigm
Implications for Professional Development

 
Robin Fogarty
Enhancing Transfer
Timothy Melchior et al
New Technologies
New Learning?

 
Stanley Pogrow
Using Techology to Combine Process and Content
Robert Swartz
Problem-Based Learning in Science
Sandra Parks
Tools to Enhance Thinking and Learning
Rosemarie M Liebmann and Anthony Colella
Processes for Diverse Voices
Rosemarie M Liebmann and Barbara Wright
Inviting the Feminine Voice
Bena Kallick
Measuring from in the Middle of Learning
Fred Morton
What Would Schools Be Like if Process Were Content?
Lou Rubin
Afterword
The Essence: Process as Content

 

For instructors

Select a Purchasing Option


Paperback
ISBN: 9780803963122
$43.95