Educational Psychology: Windows on Classrooms (8th Edition)
Educational Psychology: Windows on Classrooms, Eighth Edition provides future teachers with the practical and hands-on solutions they and their students urgently need. Long recognized as very applied and practical, Eggen and Kauchak’s Educational Psychology: Windows on Classrooms, eighth edition gives students exactly what they need to know in the intro to Ed Psych course. The author’s hallmark cases remain, both in written and video format, to introduce real-world applications in a way that no other text can. Along with new guidelines for applying theory to practice, the eighth edition provides extensive coverage of diversity and illustrations of how to appropriately align instruction to individual needs. Educational Psychology: Windows on Classrooms once again truly fulfills the promise of its title, giving students a “window” on the classrooms in which they will someday teach.
Rating:
(out of 7 reviews)
List Price: $ 147.40
$ 79.99 / Price




November 7th, 2010 at 7:33 am
Education Psychology by elbosque for Educational Psychology: Windows on Classrooms (8th Edition)
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First and foremost, this book does NOT come with an access code to MyEducationLab. It is implied in Amazon’s listing and states on the back of the book that it does. From the back cover: “To start using MyEducationLab, activate the access code packaged with your book.” I specifically purchased a new book rather than a used 7th edition because I was taking an online course that uses the videos on MyEducationLab. It’s not just Amazon’s selection-the students who bought the book from the university book store didn’t get access codes either. An access code by itself costs [...]. That is slightly less than what I paid extra to get the new book rather than a used one on [...] or some such place.
There were also numerous typos throughout the book. No hurdle to understanding, but annoying when I spent over $100 on a textbook.
November 7th, 2010 at 7:40 am
Education Psychology by sulli_pooh for Educational Psychology: Windows on Classrooms (8th Edition)
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I used this text for my Educational Psychology class and luckily, the class was built around the text. The text has online powerpoints and test bank questions that can help you study for a test. The information in teh text is very practical for someone going into an education-related profession. This product, for my class and my experience, was worth the price.
November 7th, 2010 at 7:43 am
Education Psychology by Goats for Educational Psychology: Windows on Classrooms (8th Edition)
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I went through two of these books with Amazon and neither came with the code that is needed to access the online videos. The CSR I spoke with at Amazon said that they would take the product off their site since there is a problem. It looks like that did not happen.
Do not purchase this product from Amazon!!!!
November 7th, 2010 at 8:35 am
Education Psychology by Hany Kubba for Educational Psychology: Windows on Classrooms (8th Edition)
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This is your average college textbook, very informative but sadly it’s too long. Another downside to it is that it isn’t easy to read, it will take you a while to go through each chapter. It does give a lot of good examples and advice which can be helpful if you’re interested in the teaching field. Overall, it’s not great nor bad, it’s just normal.
November 7th, 2010 at 9:18 am
Education Psychology by Kevin L. King for Educational Psychology: Windows on Classrooms (8th Edition)
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I am not an expert in Educational Psychology, but as a textbook, the text was good and interesting.
My complaint was with the messed up binding of the copy I received. In the middle of the book, there was a section of the pages that were not attached to the binding properly, and were kind of bent into the middle. I could still read and use the text fine, but it is annoying to get a book that is so clearly blemished when it is advertised as in new condition. If the book were deeply discounted because of the poor condition, I would be fine with it. As is, I am afraid it will be difficult to resell, and as fine a textbook as it is, it is not something I will keep forever on my bookshelf.