Envisioning Process as Content
Toward a Renaissance Curriculum
Edited by:
February 1997 | 280 pages | Corwin
This innovative book on school reform addresses directly the curriculum needs for the twenty-first century. The contributors share a new vision for schools that fosters a desire to learn about self, others and the world and to view life as an intellectual and personal quest for knowledge and meaning. The book presents a strong case for teaching process - including critical thinking, problem-solving, information-processing and life-long learning skills - which evidence shows can be more effective than the teaching of specific disciplines.
Peter M Senge
Foreword
Arthur L Costa and Rosemarie M Liebmann
Towards Renaissance Curriculum
Arthur L Costa and Rosemarie M Liebmann
Difficulties with the Disciplines
Arthur L Costa and Rosemarie M Liebmann
Shifting Paradigms from Either/Or to Both/And
Arthur L Costa
Curriculum
Rosemarie M Liebmann
How Process Is Connected with the Human Spirit
Nancy Skerritt
Process as Content
Ruth Lorig
Reading as a Thinking Process
Carol Lloyd
Mathematics [u/s]Is Process Education
James Henderson and David Dees
Teaching the Process of Aesthetic Knowing and Representation
Robert Swartz
Problem-Based Learning and Critical Thinking in Teaching for Science Literacy
Peg Luidens
Paper Thinking
Louis T Coulson and Alison Strickland
Learning Creative Process
Merv Akin and Martha I Turner
Historical Inquiry
Virginia Rojas
Above the World
John Dyer
Humor as Process
Lou Rubin
Afterword