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验证码:

Howard S. Adelman

职称:Professor

所属学校:University of California-Los Angeles

所属院系:life science

所属专业:Psychology, General

联系方式:(310) 825-1225

简介

Clinical-child, school based mental health programs, learning and motivation problems, intervention theory. Howard Adelman is professor of psychology and co-director (along with Linda Taylor) of the School Mental Health Project and its National Center for Mental Health in Schools at UCLA*. He began his professional career as a remedial classroom teacher in 1960 and received his Ph.D. in psychology from UCLA in 1966. He directed the Fernald School and Laboratory at UCLA from1973-1986. His research and teaching focuses on policies and practices for addressing barriers to students' learning (including educational, psychosocial, and mental health, problems). In particular, he is interested in system variables (e.g., environmental determinants and interventions, models and mechanisms for system change) and intrinsic motivational factors (e.g., self- perceptions of control, competence, relatedness) relevant to the causes and correction of emotional, behavioral, and learning problems. In recent years, he has been involved in large-scale systemic reform initiatives to enhance school and community efforts to address barriers to learning and promote healthy development. *The Center for Mental Health in Schools operates under the auspices of the School Mental Health Project at UCLA. The Center approaches mental health and psychosocial concerns from the broad perspective of addressing barriers to learning and promoting healthy development. In particular, it focuses on comprehensive, multifaceted models and practices to deal with the many external and internal barriers that interfere with development, learning, and teaching. Specific attention is given policies and strategies that can counter marginalization and fragmentation of essential interventions and enhance collaboration between school and community programs. In this respect, a major emphasis is on enhancing the interface between efforts to address barriers to learning and prevailing approaches to school and community reforms. (seeClinical-child, school based mental health programs, learning and motivation problems, intervention theory. Howard Adelman is professor of psychology and co-director (along with Linda Taylor) of the School Mental Health Project and its National Center for Mental Health in Schools at UCLA*. He began his professional career as a remedial classroom teacher in 1960 and received his Ph.D. in psychology from UCLA in 1966. He directed the Fernald School and Laboratory at UCLA from1973-1986. His research and teaching focuses on policies and practices for addressing barriers to students' learning (including educational, psychosocial, and mental health, problems). In particular, he is interested in system variables (e.g., environmental determinants and interventions, models and mechanisms for system change) and intrinsic motivational factors (e.g., self- perceptions of control, competence, relatedness) relevant to the causes and correction of emotional, behavioral, and learning problems. In recent years, he has been involved in large-scale systemic reform initiatives to enhance school and community efforts to address barriers to learning and promote healthy development. *The Center for Mental Health in Schools operates under the auspices of the School Mental Health Project at UCLA. The Center approaches mental health and psychosocial concerns from the broad perspective of addressing barriers to learning and promoting healthy development. In particular, it focuses on comprehensive, multifaceted models and practices to deal with the many external and internal barriers that interfere with development, learning, and teaching. Specific attention is given policies and strategies that can counter marginalization and fragmentation of essential interventions and enhance collaboration between school and community programs. In this respect, a major emphasis is on enhancing the interface between efforts to address barriers to learning and prevailing approaches to school and community reforms. (see

职业经历

Clinical-child, school based mental health programs, learning and motivation problems, intervention theory. Howard Adelman is professor of psychology and co-director (along with Linda Taylor) of the School Mental Health Project and its National Center for Mental Health in Schools at UCLA*. He began his professional career as a remedial classroom teacher in 1960 and received his Ph.D. in psychology from UCLA in 1966. He directed the Fernald School and Laboratory at UCLA from1973-1986. His research and teaching focuses on policies and practices for addressing barriers to students' learning (including educational, psychosocial, and mental health, problems). In particular, he is interested in system variables (e.g., environmental determinants and interventions, models and mechanisms for system change) and intrinsic motivational factors (e.g., self- perceptions of control, competence, relatedness) relevant to the causes and correction of emotional, behavioral, and learning problems. In recent years, he has been involved in large-scale systemic reform initiatives to enhance school and community efforts to address barriers to learning and promote healthy development. *The Center for Mental Health in Schools operates under the auspices of the School Mental Health Project at UCLA. The Center approaches mental health and psychosocial concerns from the broad perspective of addressing barriers to learning and promoting healthy development. In particular, it focuses on comprehensive, multifaceted models and practices to deal with the many external and internal barriers that interfere with development, learning, and teaching. Specific attention is given policies and strategies that can counter marginalization and fragmentation of essential interventions and enhance collaboration between school and community programs. In this respect, a major emphasis is on enhancing the interface between efforts to address barriers to learning and prevailing approaches to school and community reforms. (see

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