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Adult Learning and Relationships (Hardcover, New): Paris S. Strom, Robert D. Strom Adult Learning and Relationships (Hardcover, New)
Paris S. Strom, Robert D. Strom
R3,003 Discovery Miles 30 030 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

A volume in Lifespan Learning The communication and technology revolution presents each age group of adults with new expectations for learning. This book describes how education for young adults (20 to 40 years of age), persons of middle age (40 to 60 years of age) and older adults (age 60 +) can be differentiated to fulfill changing role demands emerging in response to social transformation. Developmental tasks for a society of longevity are defined including why youth should be seen as essential sources of learning for adults. Themes for each generation are school, work, family, and personal identity. The way to ensure consideration of cultural evolution and cultural preservation is for intergenerational communication to become a common obligation. Reliance on age-segregated communication is popular and comfortable because peer conversations have greater agreement and less uncertainty. However, this practice prevents reflection on views regarded as important by other age groups. When greater amounts of time are devoted to intergenerational dialogue, the usual outcomes are reciprocal learning, mutual respect, and harmony. This book identifies and elaborates the conditions of learning needed to motivate an age-integrated society. This book is for several audiences. Faculty and students studying development will find insights on learning at successive ages. Counselors will learn about client needs across the full age range of adulthood. Social service providers will recognize transition in family relationships. Nurses and administrators will discover ways to help assisted living residents maintain mental abilities and build social networks. General readers will understand ways to improve life for relatives, friends, co-workers, and themselves.

Adolescents In The Internet Age - Teaching And Learning From Them (Hardcover, 2nd Revised edition): Paris S. Strom, Robert D.... Adolescents In The Internet Age - Teaching And Learning From Them (Hardcover, 2nd Revised edition)
Paris S. Strom, Robert D. Strom
R3,328 Discovery Miles 33 280 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

Teaching adolescents and learning from them is the paradigm elaborated throughout this second edition of Adolescents in the Internet Age. The premise is based upon four assumptions: (1) Adolescents have unique experiences that qualify them as the most credible source on what growing up is like in the current environment; (2) Adolescents are more competent than many adults with tools of technology that will be needed for learning in the future; (3) Adolescents and adults can support mutual development by adopting the concept of reciprocal learning; and (4) The common quest of adolescents to gain adult identity could be attained before employment. Expectations are the theme for every chapter. The reason expectations are so important is because they influence goals, determine priorities, and are used to evaluate progress and achievements of individuals and institutions. When teacher expectations correspond with the abilities and interests of students, achievement and satisfaction are common outcomes. In contrast, if teachers expect too little, student potential can be undermined. There is also concern if expectations that students have for themselves surpass their abilities. This occurs if teachers do not inform students about their deficits. Multitasking, doing too many things at the same time, detracts from productivity. Sharing accountability depends upon complimentary and attainable expectations that can be met by students, teachers, and parents. To support appropriate expectations, tthis book for secondary teachers and high school students seeking a broader understanding of their own generation is organized in four parts about aspects of learning and development. (1) Identity expectations introduce traditional perspectives on adolescence, changes related to sources of learning, evolving emphasis of schools, and ways to support motivation, goal setting, and formation of identity. (2) Cognitive expectations examine mental abilities, academic standards, emergence of the Internet as a learning tool, development of media literacy, creative problem solving, and encouragement of higher order thinking skills. (3) Social expectations explore the need for giving greater attention to social development, importance of teamwork skills, involvement with social networking, adoption of civil behavior, school safety, and values as a basis for ethical behavior and character. (4) Health expectations center on decisions that influence physical health, well-being, and lifestyle choice. Consideration is given to stress management, emotional intelligence, and risk assessment strategies for individual teenagers and the schools that they attend.

Polling Students for School Improvement and Reform (Hardcover): Paris S. Strom, Robert D. Strom Polling Students for School Improvement and Reform (Hardcover)
Paris S. Strom, Robert D. Strom; Series edited by Paris S. Strom, Robert D. Strom
R3,002 Discovery Miles 30 020 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

People generally acknowledge the superiority of adolescents in using technology tools needed for learning in the future. The purpose of this book is to describe an online polling strategy that allows adolescents to make known how they view conditions of learning at their school. A school improvement model illustrates how to combine results of student polling with stakeholders' perceptions in the scheme of school reform. Student polling differs from other strategies because the target for gathering data is a single school. This deliberately narrow base for sampling student opinion ensures poll results have local relevance that can motivate stakeholder involvement and guide their response. Over 14,000 secondary students have completed polls examined in the text. These ten polls include: career exploration, time management, selective attention and distraction, motivation for Internet learning, tutoring, peer support, cheating, frustration, cyberbullying, and school stress. Students are the stakeholders with the most to gain or lose in efforts to keep American education competitive. Accordingly, their views should be sought as part of decision making about reform. When student opinion and adult observation are considered, an intergenerational perspective can emerge that more accurately portrays institutional strengths and limitations. School principals, superintendents, and state department of education leaders are invited to consider a collaborative project with the authors. Software offers administrators rapid feedback on whole school results. Finding out how special education, gifted and talented, and second language acquisition students view their conditions of learning gives additional insight about school improvement.

Learning Throughout Life - An Intergenerational Perspective (Hardcover, New): Robert D. Strom, Paris S. Strom Learning Throughout Life - An Intergenerational Perspective (Hardcover, New)
Robert D. Strom, Paris S. Strom
R3,334 Discovery Miles 33 340 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

The dangers of age segregation and the benefits of age integration are examined. Each generation should be recognized as an essential source for learning. Harmony will increasingly depend on general awareness of how other age groups interpret events, respect for values that guide their behavior, responsiveness to their needs and concerns, consideration of their criticisms and solutions, and acknowledgement of their contributions. This book describes: (a) personality assets and mental abilities to focus learning at each stage of development; (b) obstacles to anticipate and overcome; (c) a rationale to make reciprocal learning common; (d) research findings which identify generational learning needs; and (e) benefits of providing lifelong education. Six stages are explored: infancy and early childhood (birth-age 6); middle and later childhood (ages 6-10); adolescence (ages 10-20); early adulthood (ages 20-40); middle adulthood (ages 40-60); and older adulthood (age 60+). Some outcomes of lifelong learning include self-control, patience, integrity, resilience, persistence, problem solving ability, acceptance of criticism, and generativity. The intended audiences for this book are professionals working with individuals and families.

Thinking in Childhood and Adolescence (Hardcover): Paris S. Strom, Robert D. Strom Thinking in Childhood and Adolescence (Hardcover)
Paris S. Strom, Robert D. Strom
R3,014 Discovery Miles 30 140 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

Until recently educators were expected to provide all the knowledge students would need to ensure their future. However, the Internet has altered conditions of learning in ways that motivate students to be more self-directed and less dependent on direct instruction. Neuroscience discoveries about brain functioning also urge schools to adopt thinking as an aspect of core curriculum. Students who acquire thinking skills needed to locate information, process and organize data, generate creative and practical ideas, communicate with all age groups, and collaborate can adapt to technology change and social evolution. Encouraging adolescents to choose some goals they pursue respects their need for autonomy. Recognizing the need to amend certain goals is important so a person knows when change in personal direction is warranted. Exploring careers in a low risk setting motivates realistic aspirations and helps students to shape their future. Employer expectations for teamwork require attention. Performing well in groups including peer and self-evaluation yields productive thinking and is conducive to mental health. The intended audience for this book is college students preparing to become teachers in preschool, elementary or secondary education. The book describes ways schools and families can support higher order thinking during childhood and adolescence. Learning that occurs outside school is ignored by tests that reflect only classroom lessons. New instruments that measure thinking are needed to enable transformation of school goals and evaluation of student progress. Shifting to a dual emphasis on thinking and learning is a challenge for teachers of all grade levels.

Adolescents in the Internet Age (Hardcover, New): Paris S. Strom, Robert D. Strom Adolescents in the Internet Age (Hardcover, New)
Paris S. Strom, Robert D. Strom; Series edited by Paris S. Strom, Robert D. Strom
R3,347 Discovery Miles 33 470 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

A volume in Lifespan LearningSeries Editors Paris S. Strom, Auburn University and Robert D. Strom, Arizona State UniversityThe tools of communication technology have transformed socialization and education ofadolescents. They are the first generation to be growing up with the Internet, cell phones, iPods, computers, electronic hand helds and satellite television. Building friendships and social networksare common experiences online. Most teenagers prefer the Internet as the main source of learning.Because students know things that are unknown to teachers, their traditional relationship can shiftto provide greater benefit for both parties if they pursue reciprocal learning.This book introduces a new set of core topics to reflect current conditions of theadolescent environment instead of life in yesterday's world. The discussion shows how theInternet can be used to practice skills needed for learning and working in the future. Visualintelligence and media literacy are essential for critical thinking. Creative thinking should beencouraged in classrooms and become a more common outcome of schooling. Social maturity can improve when networking includesinteraction with adults as well as peers. Prevention of cheating and cyber abuse presents unprecedented challenges. Understandingsexuality, nutrition, exercise, and stress contribute to a healthy lifestyle.Teamwork skills, peer evaluation, and exercises for cooperative learning groups are presented. Classroom applications addressthe practical concerns of teachers. The book is organized in four domains of identity, cognitive, social, and health expectations. Eachchapter includes student polls to assess conditions of learning and websites that augment the book content. The target audience isprospective teachers, in-service teachers, and school administrators studying adolescent development on campus and by distancelearning.

Polling Students for School Improvement and Reform (Paperback): Paris S. Strom, Robert D. Strom Polling Students for School Improvement and Reform (Paperback)
Paris S. Strom, Robert D. Strom; Series edited by Paris S. Strom, Robert D. Strom
R1,232 Discovery Miles 12 320 Out of stock

People generally acknowledge the superiority of adolescents in using technology tools needed for learning in the future. The purpose of this book is to describe an online polling strategy that allows adolescents to make known how they view conditions of learning at their school. A school improvement model illustrates how to combine results of student polling with stakeholders' perceptions in the scheme of school reform. Student polling differs from other strategies because the target for gathering data is a single school. This deliberately narrow base for sampling student opinion ensures poll results have local relevance that can motivate stakeholder involvement and guide their response. Over 14,000 secondary students have completed polls examined in the text. These ten polls include: career exploration, time management, selective attention and distraction, motivation for Internet learning, tutoring, peer support, cheating, frustration, cyberbullying, and school stress. Students are the stakeholders with the most to gain or lose in efforts to keep American education competitive. Accordingly, their views should be sought as part of decision making about reform. When student opinion and adult observation are considered, an intergenerational perspective can emerge that more accurately portrays institutional strengths and limitations. School principals, superintendents, and state department of education leaders are invited to consider a collaborative project with the authors. Software offers administrators rapid feedback on whole school results. Finding out how special education, gifted and talented, and second language acquisition students view their conditions of learning gives additional insight about school improvement.

Adolescents In The Internet Age - Teaching And Learning From Them (Paperback, 2nd Revised edition): Paris S. Strom, Robert D.... Adolescents In The Internet Age - Teaching And Learning From Them (Paperback, 2nd Revised edition)
Paris S. Strom, Robert D. Strom
R1,392 Discovery Miles 13 920 Out of stock

Teaching adolescents and learning from them is the paradigm elaborated throughout this second edition of Adolescents in the Internet Age. The premise is based upon four assumptions: (1) Adolescents have unique experiences that qualify them as the most credible source on what growing up is like in the current environment; (2) Adolescents are more competent than many adults with tools of technology that will be needed for learning in the future; (3) Adolescents and adults can support mutual development by adopting the concept of reciprocal learning; and (4) The common quest of adolescents to gain adult identity could be attained before employment. Expectations are the theme for every chapter. The reason expectations are so important is because they influence goals, determine priorities, and are used to evaluate progress and achievements of individuals and institutions. When teacher expectations correspond with the abilities and interests of students, achievement and satisfaction are common outcomes. In contrast, if teachers expect too little, student potential can be undermined. There is also concern if expectations that students have for themselves surpass their abilities. This occurs if teachers do not inform students about their deficits. Multitasking, doing too many things at the same time, detracts from productivity. Sharing accountability depends upon complimentary and attainable expectations that can be met by students, teachers, and parents. To support appropriate expectations, tthis book for secondary teachers and high school students seeking a broader understanding of their own generation is organized in four parts about aspects of learning and development. (1) Identity expectations introduce traditional perspectives on adolescence, changes related to sources of learning, evolving emphasis of schools, and ways to support motivation, goal setting, and formation of identity. (2) Cognitive expectations examine mental abilities, academic standards, emergence of the Internet as a learning tool, development of media literacy, creative problem solving, and encouragement of higher order thinking skills. (3) Social expectations explore the need for giving greater attention to social development, importance of teamwork skills, involvement with social networking, adoption of civil behavior, school safety, and values as a basis for ethical behavior and character. (4) Health expectations center on decisions that influence physical health, well-being, and lifestyle choice. Consideration is given to stress management, emotional intelligence, and risk assessment strategies for individual teenagers and the schools that they attend.

Learning Throughout Life - An Intergenerational Perspective (Paperback, New): Robert D. Strom, Paris S. Strom Learning Throughout Life - An Intergenerational Perspective (Paperback, New)
Robert D. Strom, Paris S. Strom
R1,398 Discovery Miles 13 980 Out of stock

The dangers of age segregation and the benefits of age integration are examined. Each generation should be recognized as an essential source for learning. Harmony will increasingly depend on general awareness of how other age groups interpret events, respect for values that guide their behavior, responsiveness to their needs and concerns, consideration of their criticisms and solutions, and acknowledgement of their contributions. This book describes: (a) personality assets and mental abilities to focus learning at each stage of development; (b) obstacles to anticipate and overcome; (c) a rationale to make reciprocal learning common; (d) research findings which identify generational learning needs; and (e) benefits of providing lifelong education. Six stages are explored: infancy and early childhood (birth-age 6); middle and later childhood (ages 6-10); adolescence (ages 10-20); early adulthood (ages 20-40); middle adulthood (ages 40-60); and older adulthood (age 60+). Some outcomes of lifelong learning include self-control, patience, integrity, resilience, persistence, problem solving ability, acceptance of criticism, and generativity. The intended audiences for this book are professionals working with individuals and families.

Thinking in Childhood and Adolescence (Paperback): Paris S. Strom, Robert D. Strom Thinking in Childhood and Adolescence (Paperback)
Paris S. Strom, Robert D. Strom
R1,378 Discovery Miles 13 780 Out of stock

Until recently educators were expected to provide all the knowledge students would need to ensure their future. However, the Internet has altered conditions of learning in ways that motivate students to be more self-directed and less dependent on direct instruction. Neuroscience discoveries about brain functioning also urge schools to adopt thinking as an aspect of core curriculum. Students who acquire thinking skills needed to locate information, process and organize data, generate creative and practical ideas, communicate with all age groups, and collaborate can adapt to technology change and social evolution. Encouraging adolescents to choose some goals they pursue respects their need for autonomy. Recognizing the need to amend certain goals is important so a person knows when change in personal direction is warranted. Exploring careers in a low risk setting motivates realistic aspirations and helps students to shape their future. Employer expectations for teamwork require attention. Performing well in groups including peer and self-evaluation yields productive thinking and is conducive to mental health. The intended audience for this book is college students preparing to become teachers in preschool, elementary or secondary education. The book describes ways schools and families can support higher order thinking during childhood and adolescence. Learning that occurs outside school is ignored by tests that reflect only classroom lessons. New instruments that measure thinking are needed to enable transformation of school goals and evaluation of student progress. Shifting to a dual emphasis on thinking and learning is a challenge for teachers of all grade levels.

Adult Learning and Relationships (Paperback, New): Paris S. Strom, Robert D. Strom Adult Learning and Relationships (Paperback, New)
Paris S. Strom, Robert D. Strom
R1,367 Discovery Miles 13 670 Out of stock

A volume in Lifespan Learning The communication and technology revolution presents each age group of adults with new expectations for learning. This book describes how education for young adults (20 to 40 years of age), persons of middle age (40 to 60 years of age) and older adults (age 60 +) can be differentiated to fulfill changing role demands emerging in response to social transformation. Developmental tasks for a society of longevity are defined including why youth should be seen as essential sources of learning for adults. Themes for each generation are school, work, family, and personal identity. The way to ensure consideration of cultural evolution and cultural preservation is for intergenerational communication to become a common obligation. Reliance on age-segregated communication is popular and comfortable because peer conversations have greater agreement and less uncertainty. However, this practice prevents reflection on views regarded as important by other age groups. When greater amounts of time are devoted to intergenerational dialogue, the usual outcomes are reciprocal learning, mutual respect, and harmony. This book identifies and elaborates the conditions of learning needed to motivate an age-integrated society. This book is for several audiences. Faculty and students studying development will find insights on learning at successive ages. Counselors will learn about client needs across the full age range of adulthood. Social service providers will recognize transition in family relationships. Nurses and administrators will discover ways to help assisted living residents maintain mental abilities and build social networks. General readers will understand ways to improve life for relatives, friends, co-workers, and themselves.

Adolescents in the Internet Age (Paperback, New): Paris S. Strom, Robert D. Strom Adolescents in the Internet Age (Paperback, New)
Paris S. Strom, Robert D. Strom; Series edited by Paris S. Strom, Robert D. Strom
R1,417 Discovery Miles 14 170 Out of stock

A volume in Lifespan LearningSeries Editors Paris S. Strom, Auburn University and Robert D. Strom, Arizona State UniversityThe tools of communication technology have transformed socialization and education ofadolescents. They are the first generation to be growing up with the Internet, cell phones, iPods, computers, electronic hand helds and satellite television. Building friendships and social networksare common experiences online. Most teenagers prefer the Internet as the main source of learning.Because students know things that are unknown to teachers, their traditional relationship can shiftto provide greater benefit for both parties if they pursue reciprocal learning.This book introduces a new set of core topics to reflect current conditions of theadolescent environment instead of life in yesterday's world. The discussion shows how theInternet can be used to practice skills needed for learning and working in the future. Visualintelligence and media literacy are essential for critical thinking. Creative thinking should beencouraged in classrooms and become a more common outcome of schooling. Social maturity can improve when networking includesinteraction with adults as well as peers. Prevention of cheating and cyber abuse presents unprecedented challenges. Understandingsexuality, nutrition, exercise, and stress contribute to a healthy lifestyle.Teamwork skills, peer evaluation, and exercises for cooperative learning groups are presented. Classroom applications addressthe practical concerns of teachers. The book is organized in four domains of identity, cognitive, social, and health expectations. Eachchapter includes student polls to assess conditions of learning and websites that augment the book content. The target audience isprospective teachers, in-service teachers, and school administrators studying adolescent development on campus and by distancelearning.

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