R&L Education
Pages: 360
Trim: 7 x 10
978-1-4758-0231-3 • Paperback • December 2012 • $81.00 • (£62.00)
978-1-4758-0232-0 • eBook • December 2012 • $77.00 • (£59.00)
Alyssa Gonzalez-DeHass, Ph.D., has been publishing in the area of parenting influences and student motivation since receiving her doctorate. In particular, her research interests lie in the areas of students’ achievement goals, parent involvement, school-community partnerships, and the case study method to teaching educational psychology. Her first text was the Educational Psychology Casebook, also co-authored with Patricia Willems. Alyssa has been teaching in this subject area for approximately 15 years, teaching both undergraduate and graduate courses in educational psychology.
Patricia P. Willems received her Ph.D. in Educational Psychology from the University of Florida in 2000. Since the receipt of her doctorate, her research and publications have been in the areas of learning, motivation, school-community partnerships, and the case study method of instruction in educational psychology. Patricia has been teaching both undergraduate and graduate courses in educational psychology for 12 years.
Chapter 1: Introductory Chapter
Unit: Cognitive Development
Chapter 2: Jean Piaget
Chapter 3: Lev Vygotsky
Unit: Social & Moral Development
Chapter 4: Erik Erikson
Chapter 5: Lawrence Kohlberg
Unit: Behaviorism
Chapter 6: Ivan Pavlov
Chapter 7: B.F. Skinner
Unit: Cognitive & Social Cognitive Theories
Chapter 8: Albert Bandura
Chapter 9: Richard Atkinson & Richard Shiffrin
Unit: Motivation
Chapter 10: Abraham Maslow
An excellent text for use in preservice and inservice teacher education courses that focuses on showing teachers how to translate psychological theory into practice. We need more of this kind of practical application material in teacher education.
— Gordon E. Greenwood, educational psychology professor emeritus, College of Education, University of Florida, Gainesville
I agree fully with the author that theories often are covered apart from practical classroom applications, and students do not make the proper linkages. I did appreciate the way the author did that ... There were many practical applications, so the vocabulary came to life. I don't know of another textbook that does this as well as the author did.
— Darlene DeMarie, Associate Professor of Educational Psychology, University of South Florida