ABSTRACT

Are emotions good or bad for thinking and learning?

Have you ever wondered why a good lesson of one year falls flat in another?

Why do students behave the way they do?

Teachers are expected to foster productive thought yet the neglect of emotion in the classroom, in favour of intellect, means teaching and learning is often not as effective as it might be.  Thinking with Feeling explores what we mean by productive thought, its interrelationship with mood and emotions, how teachers can manage that interaction to improve teaching and learning, and what teacher trainers could do about it.

Synthesising the most important international research in the field, it offers a framework for productive, purposeful thought - deduction, understanding, creative thinking, wise thinking, and critical thinking - and explains how mood and emotion can support and also impede learning.  It considers the effect of the interplay of emotion and intellect on classroom behaviour, on students’ public performance and performance in tests, and how emotional labour can affect the teacher. 

Illustrated with examples from practice, this challenging, thoughtful study offers education professionals a basis for understanding the interaction of emotions and cognition and making it a successful partnership in order to improve teaching and learning.

 

 

 

chapter 1|8 pages

Second thoughts

Sense and sensibility

chapter 2|8 pages

Purposeful, productive thought

A framework

chapter 3|11 pages

Ever watchful

Moods, emotions and appraisals

chapter 4|11 pages

It stands to reason

Deductive thinking

chapter 5|16 pages

Order from chaos

Constructing causal understandings

chapter 6|14 pages

The inventive mind

Creative thinking and problem solving

chapter 7|16 pages

Wise thoughts in action

Hearts and minds in harmony

chapter 8|12 pages

Quality control

Critical thinking

chapter 9|12 pages

Testing times

Emotional performance

chapter 10|13 pages

Different strokes for different folks

Nature and nurture

chapter 11|11 pages

Emotional labour

Moods, emotions and the teacher

chapter 12|11 pages

Two minds are better than one