1. EDUCATION 220-3 ?

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EDUCATION 220-3
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Psychological
Issues In
Education
Spring, 1989
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Instructor: ?
Ron Marx
Monday & Wednesday
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Room: ?
MPX 9506
9:30 - 10:20 Tutorials
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Telephone: ?
291-3796
Location: Images Theatre
TOPICS:
The focus of this course is on the psychology of instruction, with an emphasis on
psychological processes that are involved in learning in formal settings. There are
five major topics organized around the course readings. Recent advances in
research and development will be discussed in each of these sections. The topics
are:
1. Development
2.
Learning and instruction
3. Instructional psychology of school subjects
4.
Measurement and evaluation
5.
Classrooms as settings for learning
REQUIREMENTS:
Students will be required to complete the following assignments:
1. Three short papers (maximum of three typed double-spaced pages) on
assigned topics. These papers will require you to demonstrate
understanding of contemporary psychological issues in education. Each
paper is worth 10 points.
2. A tutoring project or term paper (35 points). Students will choose one of
these tasks:
a.
The term paper is not simply an act of writing down what other people
have written about an issue. The paper must address a problem and
suggest a resolution of the problem which grows out of evidence and
good reasoning.
b.
The tutoring project is designed for students who plan on becoming
teachers. Students will tutor a child or adult (or a small group) and
write a report of the teaching and learning, using concepts and
principles of educational psychology.
3. Final exam (35 points) covering the semester's lectures and readings.
TEXTBOOKS:
Mayer, R.E. (1987). Educational psychology: A cognitive approach. Boston: Little,
Brown.
Stipek, D.J. (1988). Motivation to learn: From theory to practice. Englewood Cliffs:
Prentice-Hall.

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