Loading…

Sticky Learning: How Neuroscience Supports Teaching that’s Remembered is unavailable, but you can change that!

In spite of new classroom technologies, many seminary professors rely solely on auditory methods. By the end of a course, a student may have gained some knowledge and skill, but they might not have embedded what they’ve learned into their long-term memories. Elementary and secondary education teachers have worked with neuroscientists to enhance students’ learning and memory with new classroom...

knowledge, and will, in turn, become models for our students as they create educational experiences in future ministry settings. We teach as we are taught. This book is part exegesis, intended to exegete gently particular elements of the culture of higher education in religious and theological studies. While theological and religious education is unique, it is nevertheless affected by many of the same cultural and economic realities that affect universities and colleges across
Page 5