This document discusses several learning theories and their key principles for teaching and learning. It covers behavioral, cognitive, and social learning theories. For each theory, it describes the learner's role, the educator's role, and what motivates learning. It also discusses principles of teaching and learning, including how prior knowledge, motivation, knowledge organization, practice and feedback, and the learning environment can impact the learning process. The document provides examples of strategies educators can use to apply each principle.
This document discusses several learning theories and their key principles for teaching and learning. It covers behavioral, cognitive, and social learning theories. For each theory, it describes the learner's role, the educator's role, and what motivates learning. It also discusses principles of teaching and learning, including how prior knowledge, motivation, knowledge organization, practice and feedback, and the learning environment can impact the learning process. The document provides examples of strategies educators can use to apply each principle.
This document discusses several learning theories and their key principles for teaching and learning. It covers behavioral, cognitive, and social learning theories. For each theory, it describes the learner's role, the educator's role, and what motivates learning. It also discusses principles of teaching and learning, including how prior knowledge, motivation, knowledge organization, practice and feedback, and the learning environment can impact the learning process. The document provides examples of strategies educators can use to apply each principle.
This document discusses several learning theories and their key principles for teaching and learning. It covers behavioral, cognitive, and social learning theories. For each theory, it describes the learner's role, the educator's role, and what motivates learning. It also discusses principles of teaching and learning, including how prior knowledge, motivation, knowledge organization, practice and feedback, and the learning environment can impact the learning process. The document provides examples of strategies educators can use to apply each principle.
IN TEACHING AND LEARNING Learning Theories Related to Health Care Practice Learning is defined as a relatively permanent change in mental processing, emotional functioning, and/or behavior as a result of experience. It is the lifelong, dynamic process by which individuals acquire new knowledge or skills and alter their thoughts, feelings, attitudes, and actions. Learning is defined as a relatively permanent change in mental processing, emotional functioning, and/or behavior as a result of experience. It is the lifelong, dynamic process by which individuals acquire new knowledge or skills and alter their thoughts, feelings, attitudes, and actions. A learning theory is a coherent framework of integrated constructs and principles that describe, explain, or predict how people learn.
Educational psychology provides alternative theories
and perspectives on how learning occurs and what motivates people to learn and change. • How do the environment and the internal dynamics of the individual influence learning? • Is the learner viewed as relatively passive or more active? • What is the educator’s task in the learning process? • What motivates individuals to learn? • What encourages the transfer of learning to new situations? • What are the contributions and criticisms of each learning theory? Behaviorist • focuses on how a person’s environment and surroundings will bring about changes in their behavior • Focusing mainly on what is directly observable, behaviorists view learning as the product of the stimulus conditions (S) and the responses (R) that follow—sometimes termed the S-R model of learning. • behaviorists closely observe responses and then manipulate the environment to bring about the intended change. Operant conditioning, which was developed largely by B. F. Skinner (1974, 1989). Operant conditioning focuses on the behavior of the organism and the reinforcement that occurs after the response. Cognitive • stress the importance of what goes on inside the learner. Cognitive theory is assumed
• the key to learning and changing is the
individual’s cognition (perception, thought, memory, and ways of processing and structuring information). • Cognitive theorists, unlike behaviorists, maintain that reward is not necessary for learning.
• More important are learners’ goals and
expectations, which create disequilibrium, imbalance, and tension that motivate them to act. • Educators trying to influence the learning process must recognize the variety of past experiences, perceptions, ways of incorporating and thinking about information, and diverse aspirations, expectations, and social influences that affect any learning situation Subsequently, Gagné and his colleagues outlined nine events and their corresponding cognitive processes that activate effective learning (Gagné, Briggs, & Wagner, 1992): • Gain the learner’s attention (reception) • Inform the learner of the objectives and expectations (expectancy) • Stimulate the learner’s recall of prior learning (retrieval) • Present information (selective perception) • Provide guidance to facilitate the learner’s understanding (semantic encoding) • Have the learner demonstrate the information or skill (responding) • Give feedback to the learner (reinforcement) • Assess the learner’s performance (retrieval) • Work to enhance retention and transfer through application and varied practice (generalization) Social
• is largely the work of Albert Bandura (1977; 2001),
who mapped out a perspective on learning that includes consideration of the personal characteristics of the learner, behavior patterns, and the environment • the learner has become viewed as central (what Bandura calls a “human agency”), which suggests the need to identify what learners are perceiving and how they are interpreting and responding to social situations. • this theory helps explain the socialization process as well as the breakdown of behavior in society. Responsibility is placed on the educator or leader to act as an exemplary role model and to choose socially healthy experiences for individuals to observe and repeat (requiring the careful evaluation of learning materials for stereotypes, mixed or hidden messages, and negative effects). Principles of Teaching and Learning Theories Related to Health DEVELOPMENTAL STAGES OF THE LEARNER ACROSS THE LIFESPAN Birth to 12 months 1-2 years old 3 to 8 years old 6 to 10 years old 12 to 17 years old ages 18-35 years ages 36-55 years
older than 55 years
PRINCIPLES OF TEACHING AND LEARNING
• Students’ prior knowledge can help or hinder
learning. If students’ prior knowledge is robust and accurate and activated at the appropriate time, it provides a strong foundation for building new knowledge. However, when knowledge is inert, insufficient for the task, activated inappropriately, or inaccurate, it can interfere with or impede new learning. • Administer a diagnostic assessment or have students assess their own prior knowledge • Use brainstorming to reveal prior knowledge. • Identify discipline-specific conventions explicitly. • Ask students to make and test predictions • Students’ motivation determines, directs, and sustains what they do to learn. When students find positive value in a learning goal or activity, expect to successfully achieve a desired learning outcome, and perceive support from their environment, they are likely to be strongly motivated to learn. • Connect the material to students’ interests. • Provide authentic, real-world tasks • Show relevance to students’ current academic lives. • Provide rubrics • How students organize knowledge influences how they learn and apply what they know. When those connections form knowledge structures that are accurately and meaningfully organized, students are better able to retrieve and apply their knowledge effectively and efficiently. In contrast, when knowledge is connected in inaccurate or random ways, students can fail to retrieve or apply it appropriately. • Provide students with the organizational structure of the course. • Share the organization of each lecture, lab, or discussion explicitly • Make connections among concepts explicit. • Ask students to draw a concept map to expose their understanding of how course material is organized. • To develop mastery, students must acquire component skills, practice integrating them, and know when to apply what they have learned. Students must develop not only the component skills (i.e., fundamental skills) and knowledge necessary to perform complex tasks, they must also practice combining and integrating them to develop greater fluency and automaticity. Finally, students must learn when and how to apply the skills and knowledge they learn. • Provide isolated practice of weak or missing skills. • Give students opportunities to practice skills including low-stakes, ungraded assignments • Give students opportunities to apply skills or knowledge in diverse contexts. • Specify skills or knowledge and ask students to identify contexts in which they apply. • Goal-directed practice coupled with targeted feedback enhances the quality of students’ learning. Learning and performance are best fostered when students engage in practice that focuses on a specific goal or criterion, targets an appropriate level of challenge, and is of sufficient quantity and frequency to meet the performance criteria. Practice must be coupled with feedback • Be explicit about your goals in your course materials • Stage assignments by breaking tasks into smaller assignments. • Look for patterns of errors in student work. • Prioritize your feedback • Students’ current level of development interacts with the social, emotional, and intellectual climate of the course to impact learning. Many studies have shown that the climate we create has implications for our students. A negative climate may impede learning and performance, but a positive climate can energize students’ learning. • Make uncertainty safe. • Examine your assumptions about students. • Model inclusive language, behavior, and attitudes • Establish and reinforce ground rules for interaction • Use the syllabus and first day of class to establish the course climate • To become self-directed learners, students must learn to monitor and adjust their approaches to learning. Learners may engage in a variety of metacognitive processes to monitor and control their learning—assessing the task at hand, evaluating their own strengths and weaknesses, planning their approach, applying and monitoring various strategies, and reflecting on the degree to which their current approach is working. • Check students’ understanding of the task. • Have students do guided self-assessments. • Require students to reflect on and annotate their own work. • Prompt students to analyze the effectiveness of their study skills. • Have students engage in peer feedback. References Eberly Center for Teaching Excellence, Carnegie Mellon University (n.d.) Theory and Research-based Principles of Learning. Retrieved from http://www.cmu.edu/teaching/principles/learning.htm
A.T.A.P How to Achieve a Workable Classroom Environment: In a Core Curriculum Classroom (Grades Pre-K Through 8Th and Special Education) (A Book of Strategies and Research)