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Drawing Out Learning with Thinking Maps®: A Guide for Teaching and Assessment in Pre-K2 [Pehme köide]

  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 128 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 269x223x12 mm, kaal: 144 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 23-Jun-2023
  • Kirjastus: Teachers' College Press
  • ISBN-10: 080776776X
  • ISBN-13: 9780807767764
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 128 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 269x223x12 mm, kaal: 144 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 23-Jun-2023
  • Kirjastus: Teachers' College Press
  • ISBN-10: 080776776X
  • ISBN-13: 9780807767764

What and how young children are thinking are typically expressed and shared at home and school through verbal and written modes of communication. As a visual language framework conceived and developed by David Hyerle, Thinking Maps® offers an additional way for learners to represent their ideas by visually mapping their fundamental patterns of thinking. The authors offer a wide range of materials, strategies, and evidence-based practices for implementing Thinking Maps (and the metacognitive framing strategy that each map promotes) in ways that are developmentally appropriate, culturally responsive, and more inclusive with the full range of pre-K to 2nd-grade children. Since 1990, Thinking Maps have been implemented by teachers in over 15,000 schools across the United States and around the world, including countrywide implementation in Malaysia. This guide provides a whole-child approach with practical ideas and best applications for working with emergent readers and writers across developmental domains, curricula, and executive function.

Book Features:

  • Promotes systematic support of every students’ cognitive development in whole schools (pre-K–2).
  • Demonstrates how to use visual, auditory, tactile, and kinesthetic activities and materials to increase student engagement.
  • Recommends Universally Designed Learning strategies to ensure full access and inclusion with diverse learners and children with disabilities.
  • Includes graphically designed examples of Thinking Maps across content areas.
  • Provides examples of student work, lesson planning ideas, and curriculum design based on cognitive education.
  • Links language and thinking in everyday classroom learning for individual and cooperative learning.
List of Figures
vii
List of Tables
xi
Foreword Yvette Jackson xiii
Acknowledgments xv
Introduction: Can I Use Thinking Maps With Young Children? Yes, You Can! 1(8)
Thinking Maps: Integrating Three Types of Visual Tools
2(1)
Why Early Childhood?
3(1)
Thinking Maps as a Learning, Teaching, and Assessment Framework
4(5)
1 Bringing Thinking Maps to Life
9(13)
Learning Trajectories and Developmental Progressions
9(3)
The Five Critical Attributes of Thinking Maps
12(2)
TMaps Tap Into Prior Knowledge and Experience
14(1)
Thinking Maps Exemplifies Universally Designed Learning (UDL)
15(6)
Conclusion
21(1)
2 Thinking Maps Across Developmental Domains
22(9)
Developmental Appropriate Practice
22(2)
Domain 1 Cognitive Development
24(4)
Domain 2 Socioemotional Development
28(1)
Domain 3 Physical and Healthy
29(1)
Domain 4 General Learning Competencies
29(1)
Conclusion
30(1)
3 Thinking Maps Across Academic Content Areas
31(29)
Thinking Maps Inspire Talking, Reading, and Writing
32(10)
Thinking Maps Support Logical-Mathematical Reasoning
42(2)
Thinking Maps Promote Scientific Thinking, Reasoning, and Inquiry
44(10)
Engineering Design and Technology With Thinking Maps
54(1)
Social Studies Instruction and Thinking Maps
55(2)
Related Early Childhood Approaches and Curricula
57(2)
Conclusion
59(1)
4 Thinking Maps Promote Democratic Learning Communities With Full Community Membership
60(12)
Thinking Maps Promote Responsive, Democratic Learning
60(11)
Conclusion
71(1)
5 Thinking Maps Provide Authentic Formative Assessment and Documentation
72(9)
A Brief Historical Perspective of Standardized Testing
72(2)
Classroom Assessments
74(6)
Conclusion
80(1)
6 The Science Underlying Thinking Maps With Young Children
81(8)
Research and Theoretical Foundation for Thinking Maps
81(1)
Executive Function
81(3)
Self-Regulation
84(1)
Habits of Mind
85(2)
Alignment With Standards
87(2)
Conclusion 89(2)
Appendix: Glossary 91(2)
References 93(12)
Index 105(6)
About the Authors 111
Shelly L. Counsell is a retired associate professor of early childhood education, an early childhood consultant, and an Early Years Columnist with NSTA's Science & Children.

David Hyerle is a bestselling author, developer of the Thinking Maps® model, and president of Thinking Schools International.