Teaching Students to Work Harder and Enjoy It: Practice Makes Permanent
By (Author) John Jensen
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Rowman & Littlefield Education
17th February 2012
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Philosophy and theory of education
371.1023
Paperback
168
Width 152mm, Height 229mm, Spine 10mm
259g
Teaching Students to Work Harder and Enjoy It: Practice Makes Permanent points out a single, fundamental, and easily-corrected flaw that has held back American education for nearly a centurythe design of instruction to achieve familiarization instead of mastery. This book explains the psychological dynamics and methods involved in mastery, and how to apply them easily in K-12 learning. A basic insight is that once students have a correct answer to any question, a straight road to its mastery is entirely comprised of practice. Practice continues to make perfect in all skill areas including the accumulation of a body of knowledge. Outlined here are the forms of it that enable students to master academic learning perfectly and permanently, as well as become competent with social/emotional skills and alter their behavior. A combination of methods especially valuable for students falling behind can turn classrooms around quickly.
In this three-book series, John Jensen provides educators with strategies for helping students to master learning with great pleasure. This goal is a truly worthy one since students experiencing mastery and pleasure is the exception in Americas schools and school systems. Jensens philosophy for transforming childrens educational experiences is powerful and his aim to help teachers help their students to achieve remarkable learning outcomes provides readers with a compelling view of what teaching and learning can be. -- Francis M. Duffy
John Jensen has penned a volume that offers a practical path to serving students better. With an admirable focus on the value of practice and the virtue of disciplined effort, he offers advice that educators and parents would do well to heed. -- Frederick M. Hess, director of education policy studies at the American Enterprise Institute
In my opinion, the importance of practice in all aspects of education has been unfairly vilified by many so-called experts in education over the last decade or so. To deny the importance of what these "experts" call "drill & kill" in learning any new concept or skill just proves that they are truly NOT experts at how children or anyone learns. John Jensen captures this important and gives helpful practical ways to use practice in learning. -- Marilyn Reed, Educational consultant and 12-year veteran of a public school board
Dr. Jensen has an anticipatory view of what education should look like. He sees the weakness of our current education system, and has analyzed it to develop a system that will produce results. He has an ability to asses a variety of students and professionals, and implement his ideas to create a system of best practices. I saw this ability first hand when we worked together at Starshine Academy in Phoenix, Arizona. The ideas are simple, and the implementation is not difficult. It will simply take believing in it. And by reading Jensen's series, or simply by speaking with Dr. Jensen or seeing him interact with students, one will easily be convinced that his methods will be successful if implemented correctly. -- Trevor R. Waagner, educational consultant for Education, Agriculture and Technology (EAT), a think tank in Chicago, Illinois
Dr. Jensen is a life-long friend. Beginning with our high school days, I've been greatly impressed with John's perception of the learning processes which work best with various types of learners. His clear, logical and practical approaches to learning have resulted in remarkable successes. -- Lyle Riley, Retired Middle-School Teacher, Phoenix, Arizona
In a day and age where ideas and jobs move across the globe effortlessly, Teaching So Students Work Harder and Enjoy It: Practice Makes Permanent provides thoughtful ideas and strategies for students to thrive and not simply survive in this hyper-competitive, transformational world. -- Tom Watkins, Michigan's State Superintendent of Schools, 2001-05
One of the great struggles in teaching is finding practical ways to solve problems. A great many books have wonderful theoretical ideas, but they do not always translate well to daily practice. Teachers have to then spend a lot of time and energy adopting the suggestions.
Mr. Jensen's book, however, has very practical ideas for everything from supporting student talk in the classroom, to motivating students using a scoring system. The powerful suggestions from Teaching Students to Work Harder and Enjoy It: Practice Makes Permanent will help teachers in all areas of teaching and learning.
In particular, I liked the section entitled, Score Results Objectively, where Mr. Jensen makes suggestions for helping students work toward long-range mastery of material, not just "for the test Friday." For example, he writes, "Re-administer all previous tests on randomly-selected, unannounced days. As individual students demonstrate sustained mastery, exempt them from further testing on a particular section. For all others, continue re-testing all old material, and make their last score of the series their course grade." I also enjoyed the next chapter, More Ways to UseScoring because I use a similar method of tracking and scoring for Socratic Seminar and I know for a fact that it works well.
John Jensen understands that well never retrieve education from its current doldrums until we think about it from the point of view of the student. Jensens description of our Learn and Lose system
captures the ridiculous expectations that a 50-yard dash through a huge landscape of material will somehow teach a subject. Instead, Jensen offers a boatload of practical ideas to help adults help students to build the skills they need to start learning under their own steam.
John Jensen is a psychologist and educational consultant. He has studied child motivation and applied methods to classrooms since 1971.