Hodder Education
Sweller's Cognitive Load Theory in Action
Sweller's Cognitive Load Theory in Action
US$ 19.19
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Description
Contents
Reviews

What is it that enables students to learn from some classroom activities, yet leaves them totally confused by others? Although we can't see directly into students' minds, we do have Cognitive Load Theory, and this is the next best thing. Built on the foundation of all learning, the human memory system, Cognitive Load Theory details the exact actions that teachers can take to maximise student outcomes.Written under the guidance, and thoroughly reviewed by the originator of CLT, John Sweller, this practical guide summarises over 30 years of research in this field into clear and easily understandable terms. This book features both a thorough discussion of the core principles of CLT and a wide array of classroom-ready strategies to apply it to art, music, history, chemistry, PE, mathematics, computer science, economics, biology, and more.

Language
English
ISBN
9781913808440
Cover
Title Page
Copyright
Dedication
Series Foreword
Foreword
Acknowledgments
Table of Contents
Introduction: Why is Cognitive Load Theory important for teachers?
How to read this book
Part I: The A, B, C, D, E, of CLT
Architecture: the cognitive architecture of human memory
Biology: biologically primary versus biologically secondary information
Categorisation: categorisation of intrinsic and extraneous load
Domains: domain-general versus domain-specific knowledge and skills
Elements: element interactivity, the source of cognitive load
Summarising the ABCDE of CLT
Part II: Optimise intrinsic load
When to optimise intrinsic load
How to optimise intrinsic load
Pre-teaching
Segmentation
Sequencing and combination
The expertise-reversal effect
Part III: Reduce Extraneous Load
When to reduce extraneous load
Hone the presentation
Redundancy
Split-attention
Transient information
Modality
Structure the practice
Worked examples
Self-explanation
The goal-free effect
Conclusions: Cognitive Load Theory, where to from here?

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