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Author Edwards, A. S. (Austin Southwick), 1885-1976.

Title The fundamental principles of learning and study / A.S. Edwards.

Imprint Baltimore, Warwick & York, 1920.

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Location Call No. Status
 University of Saint Joseph: Pope Pius XII Library - Internet  WORLD WIDE WEB E-BOOK EBSCO    Downloadable
University of Saint Joseph patrons, please click here to access this EBSCOhost resource
Description 1 online resource (239 pages) diagrams
data file rda
Series PsychBooks Collection
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 232-236).
Note Print version record.
Contents Fundamental principles of education -- Neurology and the basis of education -- The fundamental work of education -- Learning and habit formation -- Acquisition which involves study -- Ways of thinking and pitfalls for the student -- Progress and improvability -- Arrests in learning and the limit of improvability -- The transfer of acquisitions : general improvement -- Memories and the permanence of acquisition -- Memories and the permanence of acquisition (concluded) -- Making the appeal to the student -- Attention and sustained effort -- Feeling habits and moral education -- Physical and physiological conditions -- The directing of learning and study -- Supervised study and the school curriculum -- Definiteness in aim and in method.
Summary "The present volume is a rewriting of manuscript which the writer has used for some time as part of his lectures to students in educational psychology. The aim is especially to show how the results of general psychology and experimental psychology and of allied sciences can be put into use by the teacher and the student in the problems of learning and of study. In the chapters on Making the Appeal to the Student, and Attention and Sustained Effort, examples have been given from the writer's own studies and observations for the purpose of illustrating psychological principles involved and to suggest to teachers ways that have proved successful in the actual everyday work of the teacher. The writer thinks that The Habit Theory has not received its due in educational practice and perhaps not in educational thought. It is a principle which runs through the whole work of education and the adoption of it as the fundamental working principle of the teacher's work should help to bring the definiteness that is needed. If habits, including habitudes, dispositions and attitudes, are not all the results that education can show, we can see what is left out after we do our duty to the first and fundamental things. The general scheme of the book can be indicated by the following statement of some of the main thoughts: 1) The nature of education and of the educational process from the point of view of permanent results in the individual. 2) The necessity for permanent results of some kind and the nature of these results. 3) The process of learning, of making acquisitions which can be made more or less permanent and suggestions for the right direction of this learning process. 4) A discussion of how to make the best progress in learning. 5) The getting of not only specific but general improvement. 6) The factors that make for permanent results. 7) Modes of appeal for the purpose of arousing and directing the desired activities. 8) The development through lower to higher stages of attention, activity, and effort. 9) The development of the emotional and moral nature for permanent results in moral character. 10) Physical and physiological conditions that are involved in learning and study. 11) The problem of how to study, teaching to study, and of putting supervised study into the school. 12) The need for definite ends of education and the possibility of using the principles and facts presented herein to help towards greater definiteness of aim, of procedure and of obtaining recognizable and measurable end results so that the work of education shall approach in definiteness the achievement of other big business enterprises. The directions for students appearing in chapter 16 are practically unchanged from the early writing nearly three years ago. References at the ends of chapters indicate books and articles that seem to the author to be most useful to the teacher if he wishes to choose from a large number of possible references. Others may be equally good, but a selected bibliography seems to be most valuable"--Preface. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2015 APA, all rights reserved).
Subject Educational psychology.
Habit.
Study skills.
Psychology, Educational. (DNLM)D011588
Habits. (DNLM)D006184
Test Taking Skills. (DNLM)D058013
Educational psychology. (OCoLC)fst00903571
Habit. (OCoLC)fst00950030
Study skills. (OCoLC)fst01136216
Other Form: Print version: Edwards, A.S. (Austin Southwick), 1885-1976. Fundamental principles of learning and study. Baltimore, Warwick & York, 1920 (DLC) 20022148 (OCoLC)2167817
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