Infinite Learning Diversity: Uncovering the Hidden Talents of Our Students
By (Author) Tony McCaffrey
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
12th January 2019
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Educational administration and organization
Educational strategies and policy
370.1523
Paperback
140
Width 152mm, Height 222mm, Spine 11mm
218g
Are schools smart enough to detect the cognitive diversity of students In this book we will discuss a framework that will help teachers identify the talents of their students.
Tony McCaffrey offers a whirlwind tour of the many ways people solve everyday problems: insightful and eye-opening while stressing each individuals special abilities. -- Frans de Waal, author, Are We Smart Enough to Know How Smart Animals Are (Norton, 2016)
This book offers accessible, coherent and important insights into the remarkable, and complex, world of human cognition. Tony McCaffrey uses clear and effective examples to illustrate why, and how, human language matters in understanding our cognitive process. By illustrating the overlaps and differences between human and other primate neurobiologies McCaffrey weaves a robust narrative of how we think and why that matters. -- Agustn Fuentes, The Edmund P. Joyce C.S.C. Professor of Anthropology, University of Notre Dame; author of "The Creative Spark: How Imagination Made Humans Exceptional" (Dutton, 2017)
Dr. McCaffrey uses research, practice, observations, experience, thought, wonder, and synthesis to explore the challenge of using contemporary cognitive neuroscience to develop a system to better detect many of the hidden talents in our youth. Through a fascinating prosaic journey, he elucidates the connections between language, cognition, perspective, and ultimately the need to examine these more deeply as we begin to use scientific advances to delve into the human brain to access the human mind and how we learn. Using increasingly complex puzzles to identify talents, Dr. McCaffreys case studies demonstrate the power of puzzles to recognize diverse strengths we normally would miss. -- Gerald Fussell, Principal, Lake Trail Middle School, Comox Valley School District.
This book revives a tradition of general theories of how the mind works. McCaffrey draws together attention, language, learning, memory, perception and puzzle-solving in stunningly integrative fashion, drawing on comparative psychology, neuroscience, human development, and even anthropology. His concept of blend goes well beyond simple association or Chomskys merge to account for the diversity and creativity of human thought and action. -- Michael Corballis, author of The Truth About Language: What It Is and Where It Came From (University of Chicago Press, 2017) and "The Recursive Mind: The Origins of Human Language, Thought, and Civilization" (Princeton University Press, 2014)
Tony McCaffrey holds a doctorate in cognitive psychology and researches how to make people more creative. He teaches at Eagle Hill School in Hardwick, MA, and loves creating new ways to teach math and other subjects to his students with learning differences. Tony takes joy in discovering their hidden talents, which are often overlooked. In his spare time, he leads his own company which helps other companies solve their toughest problems. He and his wife Stephanie live in the small New England town of West Brookfield, MA.