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Heal, Jim; Goodwin, Bryan – Educational Leadership, 2023
Education experts Jim Heal and Bryan Goodwin explain that students should be able to think deeply about their learning, not just appear to be engaged. The authors differentiate between student thinking and engagement and offer educators practical strategies to deepen learning and ensure it sticks.
Descriptors: Learner Engagement, Thinking Skills, Educational Practices, Cognitive Processes
Mielke, Chase – Educational Leadership, 2021
Chase Mielke, author of "The Burnout Cure: Learning to Love Teaching Again," describes how we can reframe unhealthy thinking--identifying and fixing cognitive distortions like "mind reading" and "permanence" that lead us to assume the worst.
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Well Being, Cognitive Restructuring, Cognitive Structures
Duke, Nell K. – Educational Leadership, 2020
Duke draws on research into how children learn to read to advise teachers on how to best prompt early readers who get stuck on a word. She notes the 5 key questions young readers face--What is that word? Did I read that word right? What does that word mean? What does the text mean? Why does that meaning matter--and the core mental processes and…
Descriptors: Reading Instruction, Prompting, Reading Teachers, Cognitive Processes
Immordino-Yang, Mary Helen; Knecht, Douglas R. – Educational Leadership, 2020
Human beings construct narratives about the world and their experiences in it--whether in math class or at the dinner table, people tell themselves stories about who they and others are, how the world works and why. Among teenagers, these meaning-making narratives are related to the activity and changing connectivity of the networks in their…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Development, Adolescent Development, Brain
Silver, Harvey F.; Boutz, Abigail L.; McTighe, Jay – Educational Leadership, 2022
Infusing five processes into assignments can help students hone the skills they'll need to address complex problems. The world students will enter is full of complex, unpredictable problems--and students will need sophisticated thinking skills to cope. The authors unpack five thinking processes students need to internalize through opportunities in…
Descriptors: Thinking Skills, Cognitive Processes, Inquiry, Design
Costa, Arthur L.; Kallick, Bena; McTighe, Jay; Zmuda, Allison – Educational Leadership, 2020
Students need specific thinking--or Habits of Mind--to engage with problems and become self-directed learners, write Arthur L. Costa, Bena Kallick, Jay McTighe, and Allison Zmuda. A curricular approach based on enhancing students' understanding of conceptually significant, transferable ideas can help schools teach these dispositions.
Descriptors: Thinking Skills, Problem Solving, Independent Study, Transfer of Training
Costa, Arthur L.; Kallick, Bena; Zmuda, Allison G. – Educational Leadership, 2021
As consultants who infuse the "Habits of Mind" into schools, the authors explain how spreading these habits through school can increase the whole school's well-being and feed teacher efficacy. They list seven factors that can create a "culture of efficacy" that draws on these 16 habits (thinking dispositions at the core of…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Problem Solving, Well Being, Teacher Effectiveness
McConchie, Liesl; Jensen, Eric – Educational Leadership, 2020
Authors of the newly revised Teaching with the Brain in Mind, Liesl McConchie and Eric Jensen offer whole-brain approaches teachers can take to engage students in new learning and retaining that knowledge.
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Learning Processes, Neurosciences
Boser, Ulrich – Educational Leadership, 2019
Although mastering the art of learning how to learn is considered one of the most important skills for young people, few teens know the basics of how to best learn something. And teachers rarely receive training in how to helps students become successful learners. The author describes seven well-supported techniques for learning anything that…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Learning Strategies, Active Learning, Attention
Bambrick-Santoyo, Paul; Chiger, Stephen – Educational Leadership, 2017
Part of helping students learn to read critically and with comprehension is guiding them to use writing to help think through the content and clarify what they understand--or don't. Looking at students' writing also helps teachers see how much learners are really understanding in their reading and where exactly any learner is struggling. After…
Descriptors: Reading Comprehension, Writing (Composition), Teaching Methods, Figurative Language
Costa, Arthur L.; Kallick, Bena – Educational Leadership, 2015
Masterful teachers don't just ask a lot of questions; they ask questions in a purposeful way. In this article, Costa and Kallick describe five strategies that can help teachers become more purposeful in designing and posing questions. One strategy is to plan questions that elicit student thinking at various cognitive levels, from simple recall of…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Questioning Techniques, Reflection, Cognitive Processes
Riley, Benjamin – Educational Leadership, 2017
Riley asserts that some findings of cognitive science conflict with key principles of personalized learning--that students should control the content of their learning and that they should control the pace of their learning. A personalized approach is in conflict with the cognitive science principle that committing key facts in a discipline to…
Descriptors: Individualized Instruction, Learner Controlled Instruction, Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Science
Rechtschaffen, Daniel; Rechtschaffen, Taylor – Educational Leadership, 2015
Considering that most educators think it is essential to help children attain meaningful, emotionally satisfying lives, teaching should start with developing ways of being that lead to healthy personal development. Teaching mindfulness--practices that focus and calm one's mind--is a key foundation of such development, according to the authors, who…
Descriptors: Metacognition, Teaching Methods, Human Body, Cognitive Processes
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Keene, Ellin Oliver – Educational Leadership, 2014
"Reader, say something smart. Right now. Share a deep insight or a subtle point. Quick. No? OK (with obvious disappointment), I'll come back to you later. Anybody else?" We've all experienced this in school, the author notes--the teacher giving up, concluding that we weren't going to say something smart in the allotted…
Descriptors: Time Factors (Learning), Teaching Methods, Thinking Skills, Cognitive Processes
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Himmele, William; Himmele, Persida – Educational Leadership, 2012
"Total participation techniques" provide teachers with evidence of active participation and cognitive engagement from all students at the same time. These techniques function as formative assessments that help teachers accurately monitor progress, provide feedback, and modify instruction. Compared with the traditional question-and-answer scenario,…
Descriptors: Prompting, Feedback (Response), Student Participation, Learner Engagement
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