The Developmental Relations among Mind, Brain and Education [recurso electrónico] : Essays in Honor of Robbie Case / edited by Michel Ferrari, Ljiljana Vuletic.

Por: Ferrari, Michel [editor.]Colaborador(es): Vuletic, Ljiljana [editor.] | SpringerLink (Online service)Tipo de material: TextoTextoEditor: Dordrecht : Springer Netherlands : Imprint: Springer, 2010Descripción: XVII, 374 p. online resourceTipo de contenido: text Tipo de medio: computer Tipo de portador: online resourceISBN: 9789048136667Tema(s): Education | Early childhood education | Education | Childhood Education | Learning & InstructionFormatos físicos adicionales: Printed edition:: Sin títuloClasificación CDD: 372.21 Clasificación LoC:LB1101-1139Recursos en línea: Libro electrónicoTexto
Contenidos:
Developing Mind and Brain -- A Three-Level Model of the Developing Mind: Functional and Neuronal Substantiation and Educational Implications -- Mental Attention, Multiplicative Structures, and the Causal Problems of Cognitive Development -- Higher-Order Network Reworking – New Findings -- Typical and Atypical Development of Basic Numerical Magnitude Representations: A Review of Behavioral and Neuroimaging Studies -- Children’s Developing Understanding of Number: Mind, Brain, and Culture -- Interviewing: An Insider’s Insight into Learning -- Mind and Brain in Social and Personal Development -- Phases of Social–Emotional Development from Birth to School Age -- Adolescent Narrative Thought: Developmental and Neurological Evidence in Support of a Central Social Structure -- Disentangling the Complexity of Social Giftedness: Mind, Brain, Development, and Education -- Mind, Brain, and Education in Socioeconomic Context -- Multiple Pathways to Bullying: Tailoring Educational Practices to Variations in Students’ Temperament and Brain Function -- The Intentional Personal Development of Mind and Brain Through Education -- Conclusion -- Development and Its Relation to Mind, Brain, and Education: Continuing the Work of Robbie Case.
En: Springer eBooksResumen: This book explores the intersection of neuroscience, cognitive science and education and its importance for understanding human development. It is also a tribute to the great developmental psychologist Robbie Case, who was professor at the Institute of Child Study at the University of Toronto’s Faculty of Education and only 55 years old at the time of his death in the year 2000. The book presents cutting edge work in a field that is now of growing importance, with its own international society (IMBES) and its own journal Mind, Brain and Education, continuing Case’s seminal work. Contributors to this volume, many of whom are former students and colleagues of Robbie Case, represent some of the leading researchers in developmental psychology. They were asked to explore the interface between mind, brain, and education during development. The subjects they examine range from science education to parenting, bullying, and personal development. Chapters are written in a style that makes them accessible both to teachers and graduate students, and in fact to anyone intrigued by the ways in which neuroscience, cognitive science and education inform one another. The volume also contains a wealth of detail that experts will find informative and thought-provoking. Overall, the book shows both what has been accomplished in this emerging field, as well as the exciting work that remains to be done studying the developmental relations between mind, brain, and education.
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Existencias
Tipo de ítem Biblioteca actual Colección Signatura Copia número Estado Fecha de vencimiento Código de barras
Libro Electrónico Biblioteca Electrónica
Colección de Libros Electrónicos LB1101 -1139 (Browse shelf(Abre debajo)) 1 No para préstamo 377677-2001

Developing Mind and Brain -- A Three-Level Model of the Developing Mind: Functional and Neuronal Substantiation and Educational Implications -- Mental Attention, Multiplicative Structures, and the Causal Problems of Cognitive Development -- Higher-Order Network Reworking – New Findings -- Typical and Atypical Development of Basic Numerical Magnitude Representations: A Review of Behavioral and Neuroimaging Studies -- Children’s Developing Understanding of Number: Mind, Brain, and Culture -- Interviewing: An Insider’s Insight into Learning -- Mind and Brain in Social and Personal Development -- Phases of Social–Emotional Development from Birth to School Age -- Adolescent Narrative Thought: Developmental and Neurological Evidence in Support of a Central Social Structure -- Disentangling the Complexity of Social Giftedness: Mind, Brain, Development, and Education -- Mind, Brain, and Education in Socioeconomic Context -- Multiple Pathways to Bullying: Tailoring Educational Practices to Variations in Students’ Temperament and Brain Function -- The Intentional Personal Development of Mind and Brain Through Education -- Conclusion -- Development and Its Relation to Mind, Brain, and Education: Continuing the Work of Robbie Case.

This book explores the intersection of neuroscience, cognitive science and education and its importance for understanding human development. It is also a tribute to the great developmental psychologist Robbie Case, who was professor at the Institute of Child Study at the University of Toronto’s Faculty of Education and only 55 years old at the time of his death in the year 2000. The book presents cutting edge work in a field that is now of growing importance, with its own international society (IMBES) and its own journal Mind, Brain and Education, continuing Case’s seminal work. Contributors to this volume, many of whom are former students and colleagues of Robbie Case, represent some of the leading researchers in developmental psychology. They were asked to explore the interface between mind, brain, and education during development. The subjects they examine range from science education to parenting, bullying, and personal development. Chapters are written in a style that makes them accessible both to teachers and graduate students, and in fact to anyone intrigued by the ways in which neuroscience, cognitive science and education inform one another. The volume also contains a wealth of detail that experts will find informative and thought-provoking. Overall, the book shows both what has been accomplished in this emerging field, as well as the exciting work that remains to be done studying the developmental relations between mind, brain, and education.

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