Subscribe to our Blog

Your email:

Current Articles | RSS Feed RSS Feed

Introducing Making Learning Real

  
  
  
  
  
Blogger: Denise Wolk

Making Learning RealESR has recently published two new books in the Partners in Learning series. In this blog post, we will introduce the first book: Making Learning Real: Reaching and Engaging All Learners in Secondary Classrooms, and after introducing the second of the new titles, invite you to engage in a question and answer session with the author, Carol Miller Lieber. Stay tuned for this exciting opportunity!

Carol is a national leader in integrating principles of prevention, personalization, and youth development into everyday practices and structures for secondary schools. Carol has taught students at all grade levels and in 1973 co-founded a small urban secondary school in St. Louis. She has served on education faculties at University of Missouri, and National-Louis, Lesley, and Washington Universities. Facilitating healthy development and academic success for every student has been at the heart of her work with ESR. She has supported principals, leadership teams, and faculty in their efforts to personalize learning in large and small schools, create more coherent systems of discipline and student support, and develop effective teaming and professional learning communities. She is the author of many books, including Partners in Learning about best practices in secondary classrooms, the bestselling resource The Advisory Guide on planning and implementing student advisory programs in secondary schools, and Conflict Resolution in the High School.

We believe that good teaching not only supports the intellectual development of adolescents-it nourishes their spirits and touches their hearts. Students want teachers who care about them; they want coursework that connects to their lives and the world they live in; and they want to be academically challenged and held accountable for meeting those challenges. Making Learning Real showcases proven classroom practices that increase students' motivation, effort, and engagement in learning and enable teachers and students to become partners in a high performing community of learners.

Making Learning Real is organized around seven core practices:
1: Developing Positive Relationships Among and Between Students and Teachers
2: Personalized Student-centered Learning
3: Multiple Ways of Knowing and Learning
4: Establishing Clear Norms and Boundaries
5: Building a Cohesive Community of Learners
6: Providing High Expectations and High Student Support
7: Affirming Diversity in Your Classroom.

A set of readings link theory and research to each of the core practices. The book also includes a guide for assessing student learning, preparation and start-up of the new school year, the first day of class, and the first month of school. Over 60 protocols in a special appendix offer suggestions for incorporating topics from Making Learning Real into school-based professional development and education courses.

For more information, check out the table of contents for Making Learning Real on our website:
http://esrnational.org/esr/wp-content/uploads/2009/08/Making-Learning-Real-ToC.pdf

Comments

I believe as a high school teacher there needs to be more emphasis in both curriculum and instruction when it comes to the areas of social responsibility. And especially as it applies to making learning real. The world that students will enter is full of social irresponsibility and we need to teach future citzens and leaders that there is a responsibility when it comes to those around us and what was there before we arrived.
Posted @ Monday, November 02, 2009 4:31 PM by Tim white
Hi Tim 
I agree that teaching social responsibility is part of a "whole child" approach to education. Instead of strictly an academic focus, we also need to provide social and emotional learning skills, conflict resolution, etc. to help create well-rounded citizens.
Posted @ Monday, December 21, 2009 4:06 PM by Denise Wolk
Post Comment
Name
 *
Email
 *
Website (optional)
Comment
 *

Allowed tags: <a> link, <b> bold, <i> italics