Books
How Learning Works: Seven Research-Based Principles for Smart Teaching
                                                      Susan A Ambrose
                                                      Main Collection LB1025.3. H68 2010
                                                      Also available in Ebook form
                                                      From the Inside Flap: Any conversation about effective teaching must begin with a
                                                      consideration of how students learn. However, instructors may find a gap between resources
                                                      that focus on the technical research on learning and those that provide practical
                                                      classroom strategies. How Learning Works provides the bridge for such a gap. In this
                                                      volume, the authors introduce seven general principles of learning, distilled from
                                                      the research literature as well as from twenty-seven years of experience working one-on-one
                                                      with college faculty. They have drawn on research from a breadth of perspectives (cognitive,
                                                      developmental, and social psychology; educational research; anthropology; demographics;
                                                      and organizational behavior) to identify a set of key principles underlying learning-from
                                                      how effective organization enhances retrieval and use of information to what impacts
                                                      motivation. These principles provide instructors with an understanding of student
                                                      learning that can help them see why certain teaching approaches are or are not supporting
                                                      student learning, generate or refine teaching approaches and strategies that more
                                                      effectively foster student learning in specific contexts, and transfer and apply these
                                                      principles to new courses. For anyone who wants to improve his or her students' learning,
                                                      it is crucial to understand how that learning works and how to best foster it. This
                                                      vital resource is grounded in learning theory and based on research evidence, while
                                                      being easy to understand and apply to college teaching.
Academically Adrift: Limited Learning on College Campuses 
                                                      Richard Arum and Josipa Roksa
                                                      Main Collection LA227.4. A78 2011
                                                      Are undergraduates really learning anything once they get to college? The answer is
                                                      no. As troubling as their findings are, the authors argue that for many faculty and
                                                      administrators this conclusion will come as no surprise and is the expected result
                                                      of a student body distracted by socializing or working and an institutional culture
                                                      that puts undergraduate learning close to the bottom of the priority list.
Open to Question: The Art of Teaching and Learning by Inquiry 
                                                      Walter L Bateman
                                                      Main Collection LB2331. B377 1990
                                                      Bateman demonstrates the power of inquiry teaching to transform learning from a passive
                                                      process to a dynamic, enjoyable adventure. Inquiry teaching, unlike traditional methods,
                                                      shows that truth is not revealed in a teacher's lectures but rather in the rigorous
                                                      application of the students' sharpening intelligence.
The Power of Critical Theory: Liberating Adult Learning and Teaching 
                                                      Stephen Brookfield
                                                      Main Collection LC5225.L42 B77 2005
                                                      The Power of Critical Theory presents powerful arguments for the importance of critical
                                                      theory in fostering the kind of learning that leads to a truly democratic society,
                                                      and it explores a number of tasks for adult learners including learning to challenge
                                                      ideology, contest hegemony, unmask power, overcome alienation, learn liberation, reclaim
                                                      reason, and practice democracy." "The Power of Critical Theory examines the work of
                                                      such noted theorists as Adorno, Horkheimer, Foucault, Althusser, Gramsci, Fromm, Marcuse,
                                                      and Habermas. Brookfield guides readers through key concepts and explains which theorist
                                                      is most closely identified with each concept."-Jacket.
Internalizing Higher Education: Enhancing Teaching, Learning and Curriculum 
                                                      Sally Brown and Elspeth Jones
                                                      Main Collection LC1090. I5797 2008
                                                      Explores how to broaden the approaches to learning and teaching in the higher/further
                                                      education environment. This book considers a range of questions about how to bring
                                                      in global perspectives to the learning environment and education provision
The Larger Learning: Teaching Values to College Students 
                                                      Marjorie Carpenter
                                                      Main Collection (2) LB3609. C3
                                                      Related subjects to text: Student Ethics
Teaching and Learning: A Psychological Perspective 
                                                      Thomas E. Clayton
                                                      Main Collection (2) LB1051. C33715
                                                      Related subjects to text: educational psychology
Accent on Learning 
                                                      K Patricia Cross
                                                      Main Collection LB2331. C76
                                                      Contents: Part 1: The need for a new model, Part 2: The instructional revolution,
                                                      Part 3: The curricular evolution
Tools for Teaching 
                                                      Barbara Gross Davis
                                                      Main Collection & Curriculum Library LB2331. D37 1993
                                                      Presents practical advice for beginning teachers of undergraduates, covering such
                                                      topics as planning a course, writing a syllabus, responding to diversity, leading
                                                      discussions, understanding various learning styles, testing and grading, and other
                                                      related topics.
Better Teaching, More Learning: Strategies for success in Postsecondary Settings 
                                                      James R Davis
                                                      Main Collection LB2331. 44. D38 1993
                                                      Contents: Clear Thinking about Teaching - pt. I. The Perspectives. The Subject. The
                                                      Setting. The Students - pt. II. The Teaching Strategies. Training and Coaching. Lecturing
                                                      and Explaining. Inquiry and Discovery. Groups and Teams. Experience and Reflection
                                                      - Choosing and Using the Teaching Strategies. Sturman - Some reflections on collaborative
                                                      language teaching / Kathleen M. Bailey, Ted Dale and Benjamin Squire - The power of
                                                      observation : "Make a wish, make a dream, imagine all the possibilities!" / Jerry
                                                      G. Gebhard and Akiko Ueda-Montonaga - A teacher research group in action / Sandra
                                                      R. Schecter and Rafael Ramirez - Putting a process syllabus into practice / Roger
                                                      Budd and Tony Wright - Toward a collaborative approach to curriculum development :
                                                      a case study / David Nunan.
Interdisciplinary Courses and Team Teaching: New Arrangements for Learning 
                                                      James R Davis
                                                      Main Collection LB2361.5. D38 1995
                                                      In Interdisciplinary Courses and Team Teaching: New Arrangements for Learning, James
                                                      R. Davis explains the benefits and pitfalls of interdisciplinary, team-taught courses
                                                      and provides current, practical information on how to design and conduct them. Using
                                                      examples from existing courses, he presents a convincing argument that team-taught,
                                                      interdisciplinary classes are an improvement over the traditional disciplinary.
Teaching & Learning in Higher Education 
                                                      Alice Winifred Heim
                                                      Main Collection LB2331. H44
                                                      Related subjects to text: College teaching, Higher Education Great Britain
Writing, Teaching, and Learning in the Disciplines 
                                                      Anne Herrington and Charles Moran
                                                      Main Collection LB1576. W76 1992
                                                      Contents: Pt. 1: Historical Perspectives - Pt. 2: Disciplinary and Pre-Disciplinary
                                                      Theory - Pt. 3: Teachers' Voices: Reflections on Practice - Pt. 4: Studies in the
                                                      Classroom - Pt. 5: Disciplinary Values, Discourse Practices, and Teaching
Learner-Centered Assessment on College Campuses: Shifting the Focus from Teaching
                                                            to Learning 
                                                      Mary E Huba and Jann E Freed
                                                      Main Collection LB2331. H83 2000
                                                      This resource is a well-constructed introduction to learner-centered assessment, complete
                                                      with practical, ready-to-implement assessment techniques. Designed to bring you up
                                                      to speed quickly, the book is grounded in the principles of constructivist learning
                                                      theory and continuous improvement. It helps you to connect with what you already know
                                                      about assessment, integrate that knowledge with new information, and try new approaches
                                                      to enhance your students' learning. You see clearly what it means to shift from a
                                                      teacher-centered paradigm of instruction to a learner-centered paradigm.-Jacket.
Creating Significant Learning Experiences: An Integrated Approach to Designing College
                                                            Courses 
                                                      L Dee Fink
                                                      Main Collection LB2331. F495 2003
                                                      Also available in Ebook form
                                                      "Creating Significant Learning Experiences also offers valuable recommendations on
                                                      what various organizations in higher education can do to more effectively support
                                                      better teaching. Based on the six key needs of faculty interested in changing the
                                                      way they teach, Fink identifies several specific actions for decision makers in colleges
                                                      and universities, accrediting agencies, funding agencies, journals on teaching, and
                                                      disciplinary associations." "This book presents an exciting vision of what higher
                                                      education might be, accompanied by practical advice on how to make that vision a reality."-Jacket
Learning and Teaching Genre 
                                                      Aviva Freedman and Peter Medway
                                                      Main Collection PN45.5. L43 1994
                                                      Contents: Introduction: new views of genre and their implications for education /
                                                      Aviva Freedman and Peter Medway - Tacit knowledge in classroom genres. Where is the
                                                      classroom? / Charles Bazerman - With genre in mind: the expressive, utterance, and
                                                      speech genres in classroom discourse / John Hardcastle - Genres and knowledge: students
                                                      writing in the disciplines / Janet Giltrow and Michele Valiquette - What counts as
                                                      good writing? : enculturation and writing assessment / Pat Currie - Learning to operate
                                                      successfully in advanced level history / Sally Mitchell and Richard Andrews - From
                                                      discourse in life to discourse in art : teaching poems as Bakhtinian speech genres
                                                      / Don Bialostosky - The teaching of genre. Language as personal resource and as social
                                                      construct: competing views of literacy pedagogy in Australia / Paul W. Richardson
                                                      - Writing in response to each other / John Dixon - Teaching genre as process / Richard
                                                      M. Coe - Subverting and resisting. Stoning the romance: girls as resistant readers
                                                      and writers / Pam Gilbert - Initiating students into the genres of discipline-based
                                                      reading and writing / Patrick Dias - Writing geography: literacy, identity, and schooling
                                                      / Bill Green and Alison Lee - Creating new genres in the classroom. Genres for out-of-school
                                                      involvement / Malcolm Kirtley - Purposes, not text types: learning genres through
                                                      experience of work / Sallyanne Greenwood - Speech genres, writing genres, school genres,
                                                      and computer genres / Russell Hunt.
A Handbook for Teaching and Learning in Higher Education: Enhancing Academic Practice 
                                                      Heather Fry, Steve Ketteridge, and Stephanie Marshall
                                                      Reference Collection LB2331. H3145 2009
                                                      This handbook is sensitive to the competing demands of teaching, research and scholarship
                                                      and academic management. Dealing with the rapid expansion of the use of technology
                                                      in higher education and widening student diversity, this updated and expanded edition
                                                      includes new material on for example, e-learning.
Contextual Teaching and Learning: What it is and why it's here to Stay 
                                                      Elaine B Johnson
                                                      Main Collection LB1027. J545 2002
                                                      Contextual teaching and learning (CTL) is a system for teaching that is grounded in
                                                      brain research. Brain research indicates that we learn best when we see meaning in
                                                      new tasks and material, and we discover meaning when we are able to connect new information
                                                      with our existing knowledge and experiences. Students learn best, according to neuroscience,
                                                      when they can connect the content of academic lessons with the context of their own
                                                      daily lives. Johnson discusses the elements of the brain-compatible contextual teaching
                                                      and learning system: making meaningful connections; investing school work with significance;
                                                      self-regulated learning; collaboration; critical and creating thinking; nurturing
                                                      the individual; reaching high standards; and using authentic assessment. Drawing on
                                                      the practices of teachers in kindergarten through university, Johnson provides numerous
                                                      examples of how to use each part of the CTL system
Teaching Students to Think Critically 
                                                      Chet Meyers
                                                      Main Collection (2) LB1590.3. M49 1986
                                                      Contents: Part 1: Understanding Critical Thinking, Part 2: Steps in Teaching Critical
                                                      Thinking, Part 3: Building Commitment to Critical Thinking in College
Teaching for Learning 
                                                      Louis Edward Raths
                                                      Main Collection LB1025.2. R37
                                                      Coordinated teacher preparations series
Creating the Teachable Moment: An Innovative Approach to Teaching & Learning 
                                                      Darlene L Stewart
                                                      Main Collection LB1025.3. S75 1993
                                                      Presents a new way of looking at the process of learning, arguing that the quality
                                                      of education can only occur when teachers are in the mood to teach and students are
                                                      in the mood to learn. It shows teachers how to generate a climate of stability and
                                                      well-being among themselves and their students
10 Best Teaching Practices: How Brain Research, Learning Styles, and Standards Define
                                                            Teaching Competencies 
                                                      Donna Walker Tileston
                                                      Main Collection LB1775.2. T54 2000
                                                      This book incorporates information about learning styles and standards into a classroom
                                                      instructional model that all teachers can use
Teaching and Learning 
                                                      Donald Vandenberg
                                                      Main Collection LB1055. V3
                                                      Contents: Part One: Epistemological Considerations - Part Two: Metaphysical Considerations
                                                      -Part Three: Axiological Considerations
                                                      
                                                      Learner-Centered Teaching: Five Key Changes to Practice 
                                                      Maryellen Weimer
                                                      Main Collection LB2331. W39 2002
                                                      Also available in Ebook form via EBSCOHost
                                                      Learner-Centered Teaching shows how to tie teaching and curriculum to the process
                                                      and objectives of learning rather than to the content delivery alone.-Jacket.

