Connections Essentials / Edition 1

Connections Essentials / Edition 1

ISBN-10:
1319030823
ISBN-13:
9781319030827
Pub. Date:
09/15/2017
Publisher:
Bedford/St. Martin's
ISBN-10:
1319030823
ISBN-13:
9781319030827
Pub. Date:
09/15/2017
Publisher:
Bedford/St. Martin's
Connections Essentials / Edition 1

Connections Essentials / Edition 1

$65.75
Current price is , Original price is $65.75. You
$65.75 
  • SHIP THIS ITEM
    Temporarily Out of Stock Online
  • PICK UP IN STORE
    Check Availability at Nearby Stores
$51.13  $65.75 Save 22% Current price is $51.13, Original price is $65.75. You Save 22%.
  • SHIP THIS ITEM

    Temporarily Out of Stock Online

    Please check back later for updated availability.

    Note: Access code and/or supplemental material are not guaranteed to be included with used textbook.

Temporarily Out of Stock Online


Overview

Study strategies proven to bring on success in college, career, and life as Connections Essentials teaches you academic and life skills to stimulate your achievement as an active and collaborative learner.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781319030827
Publisher: Bedford/St. Martin's
Publication date: 09/15/2017
Edition description: First Edition
Pages: 272
Product dimensions: 7.98(w) x 10.05(h) x 0.41(d)

About the Author

Paul A. Gore
Paul’s efforts to promote college and career readiness, high school and college student persistence, and academic success are informed by more than twenty years of research, program development, implementation, evaluation, consulting, and teaching. Paul currently serves as the dean of the College of Professional Sciences at Xavier University in Ohio. Paul earned his Ph.D. in counseling psychology, with an emphasis in student career development, academic success, and transition, from Loyola University–Chicago. He has held academic and administrative responsibilities at the University of Missouri–Kansas City, Southern Illinois University–Carbondale, ACT, Inc., and the University of Utah.

Paul’s work focuses on noncognitive and motivational determinants of academic and career success. In particular, he is interested in how secondary and postsecondary institutions use data describing the noncognitive strengths and weaknesses of their students to promote student success and retention. He regularly consults with secondary and postsecondary institutions in the United States and abroad on developing and evaluating student academic and career success programs.

Paul has authored more than fifty peer-reviewed journal articles and book chapters. He is the past chair of the Society for Vocational Psychology and served as an advisory board member and journal editor for the National Resource Center for the First-Year Experience and Students in Transition. He is a fellow of the American Psychological Association and was the recipient of a 2013–2014 American Council on Education Emerging Leadership fellowship.

Wade Leuwerke
Wade is an associate professor of counseling at Drake University. He earned his Ph.D. in counseling psychology from Southern Illinois University–Carbondale. Wade has authored over fifty journal articles and book chapters, as well as national and international conference presentations. One of his areas of research is the assessment and development of student and employee noncognitive skills. He cocreated the Student Strengths Inventory, a measure of noncognitive skills used with secondary and postsecondary students to identify students’ skills and drive interventions for students at risk of academic failure or dropout. Wade also studies the factors that predict college retention, the impact of computer-assisted career guidance systems on academic planning and career exploration behaviors, and the role of technology in career development processes.

Wade has experience examining school counselors’ roles and working with professional school counselors to positively impact students’ academic development, career and college exploration, and acquisition of personal and social skills that will prepare them for college and life beyond. He has worked with dozens of secondary and postsecondary institutions on a range of factors related to student success and persistence, including evaluation of institutional practices, use of data to drive student interventions, creation of individualized student success plans, training, strategic planning, resource allocation, and collaboration to promote student success. He has also worked as a research project manager focusing on academic and career development research for Kuder, Inc.; ACT, Inc.; Career Cruising; and intoCareers. Wade provides executive and career coaching for corporations and the federal government.

A.J. Metz
A.J. is an associate professor in the Department of Educational Psychology at the University of Utah and serves as director of the master’s program in school counseling. She earned a M.Ed. in rehabilitation counseling in 1997 and a Ph.D. in urban education (with a specialization in counseling psychology) in 2005 from the University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee. Her research examining factors related to academic success and career development in underrepresented and underserved student populations has led to numerous journal articles, book chapters, conference presentations, workshops, grant proposals, and faculty in-service training sessions.

A.J. has extensive teaching, counseling, consulting, and career advising experience in high schools, community colleges, and four-year public and private institutions of higher education. Her passion for teaching motivates her to experiment with innovative teaching methods and develop new and engaging activities and instructional materials. In 2015 she received the University of Utah’s Early Career Teaching Award, and in 2017 she received the College of Education Teaching Award. She is the past president of the Utah Psychological Association and serves on multiple state-level task forces and advisory councils promoting school counseling, college access, and career readiness.

Table of Contents

1: Building a Foundation for Success
Why Go to College?

Education: Good for Society, Good for You
What It Means to Be in College
Learn about Yourself
Discover Your Values
Follow Your Interests
Embrace Your Strengths — and Learn from Your Weaknesses
Getting to Know You: ACES and Other Tools [[pop out article]]
Student Voices of Experience: Finding Your Purpose
Feel the Power of Positive Psychology
Build Self-Efficacy
Be Resilient
Keep Hope Alive
Take Personal Responsibility for Your Success
Recruit Help [[pop out article]]
College Success Leads to Career Success
CHAPTER SUMMARY
CHAPTER ACTIVITIES

2: Thinking Critically and Setting Goals
Build Your Critical Thinking Skills

The Higher-Level Thinking Skills behind Critical Thinking
How to Use Your Higher-Level Thinking Skills
Compare and Contrast: Critical vs. Creative Thinking [[pop out article]]
Use Bloom’s Taxonomy
Those Blooming Test Questions! [[pop out article]]
Think Critically to Set Goals
Step 1: Gather Information (about You)
Step 2: Set a SMART Goal
Step 3: Make an Action Plan
Got Goals? Theyre Your Path to Academic Success [[pop out article]]
Step 4: List Barriers and Solutions
Student Voices of Experience: Focusing on Solutions
Step 5: Act and Evaluate Outcomes
Create Your Personal Success Plan
The PSP in Action
Create Your First Personal Success Plan
Employers Value Goal Setting [[pop out article]]
CHAPTER SUMMARY
CHAPTER ACTIVITIES


3: Motivation, Decision Making, and Personal Responsibility
What Keeps You Motivated?
Self-Efficacy
Relevance
Attitude
Youre Good Enough and Youre Smart Enough [[pop out article]]
Tap into Your Internal Motivation
Student Voices of Experience: Staying Motivated in College
Make Good Decisions
Take Personal Responsibility for Your Education
Develop a Growth Mindset
Take an Active Approach to Your Learning
Navigate the Transition to College Life
Think about Thinking and Learning
Active Learning, Personal Responsibility, and Belief Lead to Success! [[pop out article]]
My Personal Success Plan
CHAPTER SUMMARY
CHAPTER ACTIVITIES

4: Understanding Learning
Learning That Works: What the Research Tells Us
Test Yourself
Space Out Your Studying
Change Up Your Material
Make Connections So Learning Lasts
Use Verbal and Visual Information
Your Brain Is Required for Learning! [[pop out article]]
Make Learning Personal
Use the Myers-Briggs Model
Use the VARK Model
Student Voices of Experience: Using Learning Strategies in College
Succeed in Different Learning Environments
Work in a Group
Make Sure Youre Multimodal
Seek Help for Learning Challenges [[pop out article]]
My Personal Success Plan
CHAPTER SUMMARY
CHAPTER ACTIVITIES

5: Organization and Time Management
Get Organized
Create a Clean Study Space
Organize Your Documents
What’s in a Name? How to Label Your Files and Folders [[pop out article]]
Take Control of Your Time
Step 1: Track Your Time
Step 2: Identify Your Priorities
Step 3: Build Your Schedule
Step 4: Use Tools to Track Progress on Your Projects
Student Voices of Experience Tools for Time Management
Manage Time When You Learn Online [[pop out article]]
Overcome Procrastination and Minimize Distractions
Beat Procrastination
Minimize Distractions
Find Your Flow [[pop out article]]
My Personal Success Plan
CHAPTER SUMMARY
CHAPTER ACTIVITIES

6: Reading for College Success
Embrace Reading!
Prepare to Read
Preview the Material
Make a Plan for Your Reading [[pop out article]]
Identify Purposeful Reading Questions
Read with Focus
Mark Up Your Reading Material
Think Critically about What You Read
Student Voices of Experience: Gaining Confidence in Reading
Clarify Confusing Material
Reading: It’s Good for You! [[pop out article]]
Boost Your Reading Efficiency
Review What You’ve Read
Recite
Summarize
Review and Study
Read Different Types of Materials
Read for Math and Science Classes
Read Journal Articles
Ask for Help with Reading Challenges [[pop out article]]
Read Online Course Materials
My Personal Success Plan
CHAPTER SUMMARY
CHAPTER ACTIVITIES

7: Taking Effective Notes
Supercharge Your Note Taking with a Four-Step Strategy
Step 1: Prepare to Take Notes
Step 2: Actively Listen, Watch, Read, and Participate
Step 3: Record Information
Taking Notes? Grab a Pen and Paper [[pop out article]]
Step 4: Review Your Notes
Experiment with Note-Taking Methods
Outlining
Student Voices of Experience Outlining and Other Note-Taking Strategies
Charting
Cornell System
Mapping
Note-Taking Tips for Math, Science, and Online Classes
Taking Notes in Math and Science Classes
Taking Notes in Online Classes
Take Notes Like a Professional [[pop out article]]
My Personal Success Plan
CHAPTER SUMMARY
CHAPTER ACTIVITIES

8: Memory, Studying, and Test Taking
Learn How Your Memory Works
Sensory Memory
Short-Term/Working Memory
Long-Term Memory
Putting It All Together
Why You Forget [[pop out article]]
Study Basics: Set Yourself Up for Success
Manage Your Time Wisely
Join a Study Group
Make Connections
Create Your Own Study Tools
Remember Material with Mnemonics [[pop out article]]
Study for Math and Science Classes
Study for Online Classes
Prepare for Tests
Know the Exam Format
Review Previous Exams
Stay Healthy
Talk with Your Instructor
Manage Test Anxiety
Think Good Thoughts [[pop out article]]
Student Voices of Experience Preparing for Tests
Learn Test-Taking Strategies
Start Smart
Answer Common Question Types
Take Math and Science Tests
Take Tests Online
Youve Got Integrity [[pop out article]]
Follow Up after Tests
Evaluate Your Approach: Did Your Prep Work Pay Off?
Get Hard Evidence
Learn from Your Mistakes
My Personal Success Plan
CHAPTER SUMMARY
CHAPTER ACTIVITIES

9: Information Literacy and Communication
Develop Information Literacy

Find the Information You Need
Evaluate the Information Youve Found
Wikipedia: Friend or Foe? [[pop out article]]
Communicate Information through Writing
Prepare to Write
Write Your First Draft
Revise and Polish Your Paper
Student Voices of Experience Getting Feedback on Your Writing
Avoid Plaigiarism [[pop out article]]
Write in Online Classes
Present in Class with Confidence
Know Your Purpose—and Your Audience
Craft Your Presentation
Practice Your Presentation [[pop out article]]
Present Like a Pro
Harness the Power of Technology: Present Online
My Personal Success Plan
CHAPTER SUMMARY
CHAPTER ACTIVITIES

10: Connecting with Others
Enhance Your Communication Skills

Become a Better Listener
Become a Better Speaker
Build Emotional Intelligence
Recognize Emotions
Understand Emotions
Manage Emotions
The Dangers of Suppressing Your Emotions [[pop out article]]
Resolve Conflict
Be Assertive
Dont Be a Doormat [[pop out article]]
Use “I” Statements
Use All Your Skills to Resolve Conflicts
Grow and Sustain Healthy Relationships
Connect with Classmates
Connect with Instructors
Connect with Your Campus Community
Theres More to College than the Classroom [[pop out article]]
Connect with Others Online
Stay Connected with Friends and Family
Student Voices of Experience: Maintaining Relationships
Embrace Diversity

Recognize Differences
Respect Differences
Think Critically about Differences
My Personal Success Plan
CHAPTER SUMMARY
CHAPTER ACTIVITIES

11: Personal and Financial Health
Stress Less, Feel Better
Physical and Mental Health

Eat Right
Stay Active
Don’t Skimp on the Z’s
Healthy Behavior Is Good for Your Grades [[pop out article]]
Student Voices of Experience: Staying Healthy and Coping with Stress
Take Care of Your Mental Health
Don’t Abuse Alcohol and Drugs
Sexual Health
Avoid Sexually Transmitted Infections
Practice Birth Control
Financial Health
Create a Budget
Reduce Your Spending
Get a Job to Boost Your Income
Navigate Financial Aid
Ive Got Financial Aid—Now How Do I Keep It? [[pop out article]]
Control Your Credit Cards — So They Don’t Control You
My Personal Success Plan
CHAPTER SUMMARY
CHAPTER ACTIVITIES

12: Academic and Career Planning
Know Yourself
Explore Your Interests
Explore Your Values
Explore Your Skills
Understand Yourself through Campus Engagement [[pop out article]]
Develop an Academic Plan
Choose a Degree or Certificate
Choose a College Major
Choose Your Courses
Get Help from an Academic Adviser or a Counselor
Student Voices of Experience: Selecting a Major and Choosing Classes
Know Your Milestones [[pop out article]]
Investigate Career Options
Get to Know the O*NET
Talk with Experts
Get Experience
LaunchYour Job Search
Write a Résumé
Find Job Opportunities
Write a Cover Letter
Interview Effectively
Be Ready for Behavioral Interview Questions [[pop out article]]
End-of-Term Reflection: Assess Your ACES Progress
My Personal Success Plan
CHAPTER SUMMARY
CHAPTER ACTIVITIES

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews