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Daniel T Willingham

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Residence
  
Charlottesville, VA

Name
  
Daniel Willingham

Citizenship
  
USA

Education
  
Harvard University

Nationality
  
USA

Fields
  
Cognitive psychology


Daniel T. Willingham httpspbstwimgcomprofileimages8028794746644


Alma mater
  
Harvard University (PhD), Duke University (BA)

Books
  
Why Don't Students Like Scho, Cognition, When Can You Trust the Exper, Raising Kids Who Read: Wh, Valuepack: Cognition: Thinking

Institutions
  
University of Virginia

Ep 46 which learning strategies do don t work with expert dr daniel t willingham


Daniel T. Willingham (born 1961) is a psychologist at the University of Virginia, where he is a professor in the Department of Psychology. Willingham's research focuses on the application of findings from cognitive psychology and neuroscience to K–12 education.

Contents

Daniel T. Willingham Daniel T Willingham JosseyBass EducationJosseyBass Education

Willingham earned his BA from Duke University and his PhD under William Kaye Estes and Stephen Kosslyn in Cognitive Psychology from Harvard University. During the 1990s and into the early 2000s, his research focused on the brain mechanisms supporting learning, the question of whether different forms of memory are independent of one another and how these hypothetical systems might interact.

Daniel T. Willingham QUOTES BY DANIEL T WILLINGHAM AZ Quotes

Since 2002, Willingham has written the "Ask the Cognitive Scientist" column for the American Educator published by the American Federation of Teachers. In 2009, he published Why Don't Students Like School, which received positive coverage in The Wall Street Journal and The Washington Post.

Daniel T. Willingham Which Learning Strategies Do Dont Work With Expert Dr Daniel T

Willingham is known as a proponent of the use of scientific knowledge in classroom teaching and in education policy. He has sharply criticized learning styles theories as unsupported and has cautioned against the empty application of neuroscience in education. He has advocated for teaching students scientifically proven study habits, and for a greater focus on the importance of knowledge in driving reading comprehension.

In his book, "Why Don't Students Like School?" he provides nine fundamental principles than can effectively be applied to classroom use by teachers in an effort to help them understand how students' minds work, and to show how to use that knowledge to be a better teacher. He suggests it is more useful to view the human species as bad at thinking rather than as cognitively gifted. He argues the brain is not designed for thinking, it's designed to save you from having to think. He states in his book that this is because thinking is slow, effortful, and uncertain. Instead, we often rely on memory for the vast majority of decisions we make, and while memory is not always reliable, it is much more reliable than having to stop and think about every single step of every decision you need to make (for example, driving a car). He also suggests, despite the fact that our brains are not very good at thinking, we actually like to think. He reaffirms the well known idea that humans are naturally curious. However, the conditions have to be just right for curiosity to take hold (not too easy, not too hard) similar to Vygotsky's Zone of Proximal Development. For example, a joke is always funnier when you get it without needing it to be explained. He suggests this is because of the dopamine released by the brain's natural reward system whenever we solve a problem.

Books

  • Cognition: The Thinking Animal (3 editions: 2001, 2004, 2007: Prentice Hall)
  • Current Directions in Cognitive Science (Ed., with Barbara Spellman: 2004: Prentice Hall)
  • Why Don't Students Like School? (2009: Jossey-Bass)
  • When Can You Trust the Experts? (2012: Jossey-Bass)
  • Articles

  • Students Remember. . . What They Think About. American Educator, Summer 2003.
  • Reframing the Mind. Education Next, Summer 2004.
  • The Myth of Learning Styles. Change, September-October 2010.
  • Critical Thinking: Why Is It So Hard to Teach? American Educator, Summer,2007.
  • How educational theories can use neuroscientific data. Mind, Brain, and Education, 1, 140-149. (With John Lloyd)
  • 21st century skills: The challenges ahead. Educational Leadership, 67, 16-21. (With Andrew Rotherham)
  • References

    Daniel T. Willingham Wikipedia