ABSTRACT

For this volume, Professors McKinney, Schiamberg, and Shelton assembled contributors to write about something that is written about far too infrequently: How to present scientific research on adolescent development in ways students find interesting, believable, relevant, and worth remembering when the term is over. Graduate education in adolescent development almost always guarantees adequate training in research and theory, but training in creative pedagogy is more often than not left to chance. Those of us who teach adolescence regularly know that colleagues all over the world use innovative approaches to take advantage of the real-world relevance of the material, but most of these approaches remain insiders’ tricks of the trade. Teaching About Adolescence is, to my knowledge, the first volume that describes and explains how—and, more importantly, why—the best teachers of adolescence do what they do. It is a much needed book. But this book is much more than a collection of recipes for interesting class exercises or term projects.  First published in 1999. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.

chapter 6|20 pages

Positive Youth Development

An Approach for Community Awareness and Action

chapter 7|14 pages

Teaching Sexual Development

chapter 9|15 pages

Teaching the Concept of Identity

chapter |4 pages

Epilogue

The Mid-Term Examination: What We’ve Learned so Far—and what We’ve Not