Assignment On Teaching Learning Theories: Course Title Assignment Code Id No
Assignment On Teaching Learning Theories: Course Title Assignment Code Id No
Assignment On Teaching Learning Theories: Course Title Assignment Code Id No
ASSIGNMENT ON
Teaching Learning Theories
Submitted To:
Ms. Neha Mam
Associate Professor
Department Of Nursing
Submitted By:
Maya Verma
Dept. of MSC Nursing 1ST YEAR
Date of Submission:
Student’s Signature
Introduction
It is an accepted fact that teachers are usually not born but made. Good teachers
nurture their knowledge and skills through constant and deliberate efforts. One of the
prerequisite to be good teacher is to understand the teaching learning process in more
depth. This facilitates better appreciation of the teaching profession as well as the
process of imparting education. This paper is intended to give an insight into the
concept of teaching and learning for teachers who intend to excel in their teaching
career.
Concept of Learning
Learning is about a change: the change brought about by developing a new skill,
understanding a scientific law, changing an attitude. The change is not merely incidental
or natural in the way that our appearance changes as we get older. Learning is a
relatively permanent change, usually brought about intentionally. When we attend a
course, search through a book, or read a discussion paper, we set out to learn!
Other learning can take place without planning, for example by experience. Generally with all learning
there is an element within us of wishing to remember and understand
why something happens and to do it better next time
Cognitivism.
In contrast to behaviourism, cognitivism focuses on the idea that students
process information they receive rather than just responding to a stimulus,
as with behaviourism.There is still a behaviour change evident, but this is in
response to thinking and processing information.Cognitive theories were
developed in the early 1900s in Germany from Gestalt
psychology byWolfgangKohler.InEnglish,Gestalt roughly translates to they
orgniisation of something as a whole, that is viewed as more than the sum
of its individual parts.
Constructivism.
Constructivism is based on the premise that we construct learning
new ideas based on our own prior knowledge and experiences.
Learning, therefore, is unique to the individual learner. Students
adapt their models of understanding either by reflecting on prior
theories or resolving misconceptions.Students need to have a prior
base of knowledge for constructivist approaches to be effective.
Bruner’s spiral curriculum (see below) is a great example of
constructivism in action.As students are constructing their own
knowledge base, outcomes cannot always be anticipated, therefore,
the teacher should check and challenge misconceptions that may
have arisen. When consistent outcomes are required, a
constructivist approach may not be the ideal theory to use.
Experimental
One of the key theorists of experiential learning is David Kolb who developed
his experiential model, as opposed to a purer cognitive which formally
recognised that people learn from experience and described learning as
following a cycle of experiential stages.
The study of human learning focuses on how individuals acquire and modify their
knowledge, skills, strategies, beliefs, and behaviors. Learning represents an enduring
change in behavior or in the capacity to behave in a given fashion, which results from
practice or other experiences. This definition excludes temporary changes in behavior
due to illness, fatigue, or drugs, as well as behaviors reflecting genetic and
maturational factors, although many of the latter require responsive environments to
manifest themselves. The scientific study of learning had its beginnings in writings of
such early philosophers as Plato and Aristotle. Two prominent positions on how
knowledge is acquired are rationalism and empiricism. The psychological study of
learning began late in the nineteenth century. Structuralism and functionalism were
active schools of thought at the beginning of the twentieth century with such
proponents as Titchener, Dewey, and James, but these positions suffered from
problems that limited widespread applicability to psychology.
Conclusion
New Delhi: Book Enclave. Aggarwal, J.C. (1990). Curriculum Reform in India- World
overviews, Doaba World Education Series-3. Delhi: Doaba House.