|
Showing 1 - 4 of
4 matches in All Departments
In the twenty-first century, learning-and the definition of
education-is changing. New digital, online, and social tools have
the ability to transform the classroom and engage learners like
never before. Measuring and Analyzing Informal Learning in the
Digital Age investigates some of the primary technologies being
used in educational settings and how a less structured and more
open learning environment can effectively motivate students in
their studies. Bringing together a wide variety of perspectives
from a global list of authors, this premier reference is a crucial
source of information for educators, administrators, theorists, and
other professionals in the education field.
The third edition of Patricia Cranton’s Understanding and
Promoting Transformative Learning brings a wealth of new insight
from the tremendous growth in the field during the decade since the
previous edition. As in the previous editions, the book helps adult
educators understand what transformative learning is, distinguish
it from other forms of learning, and foster it in their practice.
The first part of the book is dedicated to clarifying
transformative learning theory and relating it to other theoretical
frameworks. The author examines transformative learning from the
learner’s perspective, and discusses individual differences in
how learners go through the process. In the second half of the
book, the focus is squarely on strategies for promoting
transformative learning in a wide variety of adult and higher
education contexts. Practitioners will be able to take ideas from
the text and apply them directly in their teaching. Since 1975,
transformative learning has become a core theoretical perspective
in adult and higher education, and research has proliferated. In
the past decade, adult education and especially transformative
learning grew into a noticeably larger field. The numbers of
undergraduate and graduate programs in adult education have
increased and continue to increase as more and more individuals are
seeking the expertise, skills, and training necessary to work with
adult learners in higher education, business, industry, government,
health professions, non-profit organizations, and community
development. In addition, the number of programs in higher
education (both undergraduate and graduate) that include courses in
transformative learning has grown dramatically. These academic
audiences use the book to further their understanding of
transformative learning theory and practice. Drawing on the latest
research as well as the author’s own teaching experience in both
online and face-to-face courses, this new edition will be a vital
resource for members of the transformative learning community, as
well as those encountering the topic for the first time.
The third edition of Patricia Cranton's Understanding and Promoting
Transformative Learning brings a wealth of new insight from the
tremendous growth in the field during the decade since the previous
edition. As in the previous editions, the book helps adult
educators understand what transformative learning is, distinguish
it from other forms of learning, and foster it in their practice.
The first part of the book is dedicated to clarifying
transformative learning theory and relating it to other theoretical
frameworks. The author examines transformative learning from the
learner's perspective, and discusses individual differences in how
learners go through the process. In the second half of the book,
the focus is squarely on strategies for promoting transformative
learning in a wide variety of adult and higher education contexts.
Practitioners will be able to take ideas from the text and apply
them directly in their teaching. Since 1975, transformative
learning has become a core theoretical perspective in adult and
higher education, and research has proliferated. In the past
decade, adult education and especially transformative learning grew
into a noticeably larger field. The numbers of undergraduate and
graduate programs in adult education have increased and continue to
increase as more and more individuals are seeking the expertise,
skills, and training necessary to work with adult learners in
higher education, business, industry, government, health
professions, non-profit organizations, and community development.
In addition, the number of programs in higher education (both
undergraduate and graduate) that include courses in transformative
learning has grown dramatically. These academic audiences use the
book to further their understanding of transformative learning
theory and practice. Drawing on the latest research as well as the
author's own teaching experience in both online and face-to-face
courses, this new edition will be a vital resource for members of
the transformative learning community, as well as those
encountering the topic for the first time.
|
|