Education That Works: The Neuroscience of Building a More Effective Higher Education

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Ideapress Publishing, 2017 - 320 pagine

Education That Works addresses the issue of how college and university education can be made more impactful by incorporating a variety of experiential education activities and how this approach is natural given what we know today about how the brain works at multiple levels from modern brain scanners.

The key point is that the brain operates on conscious and unconscious decision-making levels and that the latter is under appreciated in higher education but is well-suited to learning from direct experience in complement to the academic curriculum. Classic among these experiential activities is an internship, but also included are study abroad, undergraduate research, service-learning, and other activities that bring the student's classroom study into a more real-world project or operation in a way that allows them to apply what they are studying to what they might ultimately do with their college learning when they graduate. The book examines experiential activates from this perspective and looks at how they might be implemented in the university setting. For example, key among the programs is the use of reflection to better integrate these two types of decision-making and important among the impacts is an expected increase in retention and job/school placement after college.

Informazioni sull'autore (2017)

As a professor of behavioral neuroscience for thirty years first at Harvard University and then at Northeastern University Dr. James Stellar studied the basic neurobiology of reward/motivational processes, working with a remarkable group of students including many undergraduate research assistants. In 1998 he became the Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences at Northeastern serving for ten years during the period of the institutions rapid rise in quality and ranking. Six years ago, Dr. Stellar joined the public university world first as Provost at Queens College CUNY and then in February of 2015 as Provost at the University at Albany SUNY. He continues to co-direct the WACE Planning Institute on ExEd, which has helped 80 universities develop such programs, and he has consulted on national ExEd programs in Thailand and Namibia. He lives in Albany, New York.

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