What Learning Looks Like: Mediated Learning in Theory and Practice, K-6

In this unique collaboration, the authors bring to life the theory of mediated learning. Through numerous examples and scenarios from classrooms and museums, they show how mediated learning helps children to become more effective learners. Readers learn the steps in the process, including analyzing the child’s problem, teaching the child to focus on the difficulty, and using the techniques of mediated learning to enable the child to overcome the learning challenge. This is the first book to present Feuerstein’s groundbreaking work in accessible language with copious examples of practice. With this volume, educators and administrators will have a reliable and practical way to understand the place of mediated learning in today’s schools.

Book Features:

  • Step-by-step guidance for diverse teaching situations.
  • Examples from museum exhibits and exemplars of practice.
  • Useful teaching illustrations.
  • A list of cognitive functions that can impair learning.
  • Advice for parents of children with learning challenges.

Reuven Feuerstein is a psychologist who chairs the International Center for the Enhancement of Learning Potential (ICELP) that he founded in 1993. He is the coauthor of Beyond Smarter: Mediated Learning and the Brain's Capacity for Change. Ann Lewin-Benham founded and for 20 years directed the Capital Children’s Museum in Washington, DC. She is the author of Possible Schools, Powerful Children; Infants and Toddlers at Work; and Twelve Best Practices for Early Education. Daniel Feuerstein, who created the drawings featured in this book, illustrates children’s books and educational tools.

“Ann Lewin-Benham and Reuven Feuerstein have collaborated to provide a remarkable, readable, and systematic exposition that joins the theory and practice of mediated learning experiences within the real worlds of museums and classrooms. The book provides concrete examples that show museum directors, teachers, and parents the practical ‘how to’ for building children’s cognitive structures.”
—From the Foreword by James Bellanca, International Renewal Institute

“Feuerstein and Lewin-Benham invite us to think differently about what constitutes learning. This phenomenal book makes the mediator's role more practical by providing not only the theory and research to support this strategy, but also specific examples, instructional sequences, and linguistic tools that teachers and parents can thoughtfully and intentionally employ to cause children to think more deeply and to understand their own cognitive processes.”
Arthur L. Costa, Professor Emeritus, California State University, Sacramento

1110855570
What Learning Looks Like: Mediated Learning in Theory and Practice, K-6

In this unique collaboration, the authors bring to life the theory of mediated learning. Through numerous examples and scenarios from classrooms and museums, they show how mediated learning helps children to become more effective learners. Readers learn the steps in the process, including analyzing the child’s problem, teaching the child to focus on the difficulty, and using the techniques of mediated learning to enable the child to overcome the learning challenge. This is the first book to present Feuerstein’s groundbreaking work in accessible language with copious examples of practice. With this volume, educators and administrators will have a reliable and practical way to understand the place of mediated learning in today’s schools.

Book Features:

  • Step-by-step guidance for diverse teaching situations.
  • Examples from museum exhibits and exemplars of practice.
  • Useful teaching illustrations.
  • A list of cognitive functions that can impair learning.
  • Advice for parents of children with learning challenges.

Reuven Feuerstein is a psychologist who chairs the International Center for the Enhancement of Learning Potential (ICELP) that he founded in 1993. He is the coauthor of Beyond Smarter: Mediated Learning and the Brain's Capacity for Change. Ann Lewin-Benham founded and for 20 years directed the Capital Children’s Museum in Washington, DC. She is the author of Possible Schools, Powerful Children; Infants and Toddlers at Work; and Twelve Best Practices for Early Education. Daniel Feuerstein, who created the drawings featured in this book, illustrates children’s books and educational tools.

“Ann Lewin-Benham and Reuven Feuerstein have collaborated to provide a remarkable, readable, and systematic exposition that joins the theory and practice of mediated learning experiences within the real worlds of museums and classrooms. The book provides concrete examples that show museum directors, teachers, and parents the practical ‘how to’ for building children’s cognitive structures.”
—From the Foreword by James Bellanca, International Renewal Institute

“Feuerstein and Lewin-Benham invite us to think differently about what constitutes learning. This phenomenal book makes the mediator's role more practical by providing not only the theory and research to support this strategy, but also specific examples, instructional sequences, and linguistic tools that teachers and parents can thoughtfully and intentionally employ to cause children to think more deeply and to understand their own cognitive processes.”
Arthur L. Costa, Professor Emeritus, California State University, Sacramento

32.49 In Stock
What Learning Looks Like: Mediated Learning in Theory and Practice, K-6

What Learning Looks Like: Mediated Learning in Theory and Practice, K-6

What Learning Looks Like: Mediated Learning in Theory and Practice, K-6

What Learning Looks Like: Mediated Learning in Theory and Practice, K-6

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Overview

In this unique collaboration, the authors bring to life the theory of mediated learning. Through numerous examples and scenarios from classrooms and museums, they show how mediated learning helps children to become more effective learners. Readers learn the steps in the process, including analyzing the child’s problem, teaching the child to focus on the difficulty, and using the techniques of mediated learning to enable the child to overcome the learning challenge. This is the first book to present Feuerstein’s groundbreaking work in accessible language with copious examples of practice. With this volume, educators and administrators will have a reliable and practical way to understand the place of mediated learning in today’s schools.

Book Features:

  • Step-by-step guidance for diverse teaching situations.
  • Examples from museum exhibits and exemplars of practice.
  • Useful teaching illustrations.
  • A list of cognitive functions that can impair learning.
  • Advice for parents of children with learning challenges.

Reuven Feuerstein is a psychologist who chairs the International Center for the Enhancement of Learning Potential (ICELP) that he founded in 1993. He is the coauthor of Beyond Smarter: Mediated Learning and the Brain's Capacity for Change. Ann Lewin-Benham founded and for 20 years directed the Capital Children’s Museum in Washington, DC. She is the author of Possible Schools, Powerful Children; Infants and Toddlers at Work; and Twelve Best Practices for Early Education. Daniel Feuerstein, who created the drawings featured in this book, illustrates children’s books and educational tools.

“Ann Lewin-Benham and Reuven Feuerstein have collaborated to provide a remarkable, readable, and systematic exposition that joins the theory and practice of mediated learning experiences within the real worlds of museums and classrooms. The book provides concrete examples that show museum directors, teachers, and parents the practical ‘how to’ for building children’s cognitive structures.”
—From the Foreword by James Bellanca, International Renewal Institute

“Feuerstein and Lewin-Benham invite us to think differently about what constitutes learning. This phenomenal book makes the mediator's role more practical by providing not only the theory and research to support this strategy, but also specific examples, instructional sequences, and linguistic tools that teachers and parents can thoughtfully and intentionally employ to cause children to think more deeply and to understand their own cognitive processes.”
Arthur L. Costa, Professor Emeritus, California State University, Sacramento


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780807771037
Publisher: Teachers College Press
Publication date: 06/06/2013
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

Reuven Feuerstein was the founder and director of the Feuerstein Institute (formerly ICELP) and professor of psychology in Bar-Ilan University’s School of Education (Ramat-Gan, Israel), and a Nobel Prize nominee. Louis H. Falik is emeritus professor of counseling at San Francisco State University and a senior scholar at the Feuerstein Institute. Refael Feuerstein is chairman of the Feuerstein Institute. Their books include Beyond Smarter: Mediated Learning and the Brain's Capacity for Change and A Think-Aloud and Talk-Aloud Approach to Building Language: Overcoming Disability, Delay, and Deficiency.

Table of Contents

Foreword James Bellanca xi

Acknowledgments xv

Introduction 1

Mediation: A Brief Description and Examples 1

A Word About Deficient Cognitive Functions 2

Reading This Book 3

Chapter Summaries 4

Knowing Your Authors 5

1 Learning Through Mediation 9

Museums' Potential to Stimulate Learning 11

At a Museum: What Didn't Happen, Why, and Changing It 14

Recognizing Myths About Learning 21

2 The Mediated Learning Experience Defined 26

Feuerstein: Mediator and Theorist 26

Theory of Mediation 30

The Three Partners of Mediation 33

Essential Aspects of Mediation 38

Summary: A Picture of Mediation 42

3 Mediated Learning in Action 44

The FIE Programs: An Overview 44

FIE Lessons by Mediators 53

Summary: Imaginative, Authoritative, and Responsive Teaching 58

4 Expert Mediators 59

Mediation in Two Classrooms 60

Mediation in an Exhibit 66

Summary 69

5 Four Essential Cognitive Acts 71

Acquiring Basic Competencies 71

Intersection of Basic Competencies 76

Summary: Mediation-The Connecting Link to Learning 85

6 Defining the Effectiveness of Learning Experiences 87

The Cognitive Map 87

The Thinking Deficiencies Tool 97

Two Techniques to Enhance Learning 98

The Case for Mediation: Demetria's Story 101

Summary: Analytic Observation Tools 102

7 Creative Use of Effective Exhibits 103

Learning from Rich Experiences 103

Providing Conflict-Producing Ideas 111

Appealing to Multiple Intelligences 114

Summary: Mediating Exhibits 117

8 More Essential Cognitive Acts 118

Empathy 118

Acquiring New Skills 121

Mastering Varied Modalities 122

Collaborating 126

Complex Thinking Acts 129

Museums' Abundant Experiences 131

Summary: Mediating for Complexity 132

9 Blue Sky Partnerships 133

Beliefs About Learning 133

Adult Interventions 138

Museums as Partners 140

"What If Ideas 143

Emily's Story: Mother as Mediator 147

Summary: Museums as Learning Centers 148

10 Enlarging the Cognitive Repertoire 149

Incongruence 153

Repetition 153

Transformation 158

Illusion 164

Stereognostic (Hand/Vision) Experiencees 166

Summary: Challenging Designs 168

11 Stretching the Brain to Make Learning Happen 170

Motivation 170

Summary: Four Interrelated Factors in Learning 177

Moving from Concrete to Abstract Thinking 177

The Brain and Learning 182

Summary: When We Think and Learn 185

12 After Words 189

For Teachers 189

Questions to Ask of Exhibits 194

Summary Prepare, Question, Discuss 198

Understanding Exhibit Design 198

Summary: Bringing Learning Home 201

Appendix A List of Deficient Cognitive Functions 203

Appendix B Children with Learning Challenges: Notes for Parents and Exhibit Designers 205

References 207

Index 213

About the Authors 219

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

“Rich with vivid examples, this book goes beyond sharing ideas to spark action toward deeper learning, even for oneself.”
David Perkins, Project Zero, Harvard Graduate School of Education


“Ann Lewin-Benham and Reuven Feuerstein have collaborated to provide a remarkable, readable, and systematic exposition that joins the theory and practice of mediated learning experiences within the real worlds of museums and classrooms. The book provides concrete examples that show museum directors, teachers, and parents the practical ‘how to’ for building children’s cognitive structures.”
—From the Foreword by James Bellanca, International Renewal Institute


“Feuerstein and Lewin-Benham invite us to think differently about what constitutes learning. This phenomenal book makes the mediator's role more practical by providing not only the theory and research to support this strategy, but also specific examples, instructional sequences, and linguistic tools that teachers and parents can thoughtfully and intentionally employ to cause children to think more deeply and to understand their own cognitive processes.”
Arthur L. Costa, Professor Emeritus, California State University, Sacramento

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