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This compelling book provides one of the most comprehensive and
detailed evaluations of a very popular cognitive skills course --
Reuven Feuerstein's Instrumental Enrichment Programme. Feuerstein
claims that his program, a model for diagnosing and remedying
cognitive deficiencies in poor attainers, can equip pupils with the
basic prerequisites of thinking, thereby enabling them to become
more effective learners. Combining innovative and traditional
experimental techniques, this text analyzes both teacher and pupil
outcomes on a wide range of issues including abilities,
accomplishments, and behavioral characteristics. The implications
of the study are set against theoretical and practical issues
involved in other popular intellectual skills training programs.
"Real world" concerns that have been largely ignored by research
literature are addressed, as are their effects on the teaching of
thinking skills.
This book was first published in 1987. School phobia (or school
refusal) is a puzzling problem that is still insufficiently
understood. It is quite different from truancy and can lead to
long-term adjustment difficulties if ignored or inappropriately
treated. The purpose of this book is three-fold: first, to describe
the nature of school phobia; secondly, to review the treatment
literature exposing the common elements of the most successful,
though theoretically different, approaches; thirdly, to provide a
detailed step-by-step guide to the diagnosis and treatment of
school phobia involving a rapid return to school and comprehensive
behavioural management. The techniques and principles discussed are
illustrated in a series of case studies. The book is aimed at
parents and those professionals who regularly come into contact
with children with school phobia, such as educational and clinical
psychologists, child psychotherapists, behaviour therapists and
family therapists, psychiatrists, paediatricians and family
doctors, and teachers and researchers from all phases of education.
If these professional groups could achieve a common understanding
of school phobia, many more children could be treated quickly and
effectively.
This book was first published in 1987. School phobia (or school
refusal) is a puzzling problem that is still insufficiently
understood. It is quite different from truancy and can lead to
long-term adjustment difficulties if ignored or inappropriately
treated. The purpose of this book is three-fold: first, to describe
the nature of school phobia; secondly, to review the treatment
literature exposing the common elements of the most successful,
though theoretically different, approaches; thirdly, to provide a
detailed step-by-step guide to the diagnosis and treatment of
school phobia involving a rapid return to school and comprehensive
behavioural management. The techniques and principles discussed are
illustrated in a series of case studies. The book is aimed at
parents and those professionals who regularly come into contact
with children with school phobia, such as educational and clinical
psychologists, child psychotherapists, behaviour therapists and
family therapists, psychiatrists, paediatricians and family
doctors, and teachers and researchers from all phases of education.
If these professional groups could achieve a common understanding
of school phobia, many more children could be treated quickly and
effectively.
This compelling book provides one of the most comprehensive and
detailed evaluations of a very popular cognitive skills course --
Reuven Feuerstein's Instrumental Enrichment Programme. Feuerstein
claims that his program, a model for diagnosing and remedying
cognitive deficiencies in poor attainers, can equip pupils with the
basic prerequisites of thinking, thereby enabling them to become
more effective learners. Combining innovative and traditional
experimental techniques, this text analyzes both teacher and pupil
outcomes on a wide range of issues including abilities,
accomplishments, and behavioral characteristics. The implications
of the study are set against theoretical and practical issues
involved in other popular intellectual skills training programs.
"Real world" concerns that have been largely ignored by research
literature are addressed, as are their effects on the teaching of
thinking skills.
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