What the West Can Learn From the East: Asian Perspectives on the Psychology of Learning and Motivation

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Dennis M. McInerney, Oon Seng Tan, Gregory Arief D. Liem, Ai-Girl Tan
IAP, Oct 1, 2008 - Education - 337 pages
Education, East and West, is today mostly Western in orientation. Asian perspectives remain relatively unrepresented in curricula, pedagogy and administrative structures. This volume has brought together authors researching in Asia who redress this imbalance and describe what the West can learn from the East. Topics covered include conceptions of and approaches to effective learning and teaching, self-regulated learning, perceived causes of success and failure, valuing of education, peer influences and classroom behavior, creativity, teacher commitment, class size, motivation, future goals, and other influences on effective learning. Shared insights from the research and theorizing presented should provide a fascinating perspectives for educators and administrators charged with providing cutting-edge, research-based educational best practices in diverse cultural and social environments internationally.
 

Contents

Teaching Creativity as a DemandLed Competency
11
Western Influences on the East Eastern Influences
31
A Basic
59
Perceptions of Students From
77
CrossCultural Views of Teacher Commitment
101
Filipino Adolescent Students Conceptions
169
Motivational and SelfGoals of Female Students
191
Motivation Attribution of Academic Experiences
217
vii
228
CrossCultural Validation of SelfRegulated
245
Future Goals and SelfRegulated Learning Among
267
Role of Fieldwork in Humanities
295
About the Authors
313
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