Unit 1 Theories of Learning: Ro Roaches
Unit 1 Theories of Learning: Ro Roaches
Unit 1 Theories of Learning: Ro Roaches
Structure
Objectives
Introduction
The Concept of Learning
1.2.1 Learning and performance
1.2.2 Learning and cognitive development
1.2.3 Learning and maturation
1.2.4 Experiential learning and constructivism
1.2.5 Basic conditions of learning
1.2.6 Approaches to learning (Deep and Surface)
Theories of Learning : Behaviourism
1.3.1 Behaviourist views
1.3.2 Educational implications
1.3.3 Skinner's theory of operait conditioning
Theories of Learning : Cognitive ro roaches
1.4.1 Cognitive approach
1.4.2 Educational implications of Gagne's theory of learning
1.4.3 Bruner's discovery learning
Synthesis of the Behaviourist and the Cognitive Approach
1.5.1 GagnC's views on learning
1.5.2 Educational implications
The Taxonomy of Learning Outcomes
1.6.1 Cognitive domain
1.6.2 Affective domain
1.6.3 Psychomotor dbmain
Let Us Sum Up
1.O OBJECTIVES
After having worked through this unit, you should be able to:
define learning and its basic conditions,
explain various theories of learning and their educational implications,
describe learning outcomes in three domains -cognitive, affective and
psychomotor,
write the required instructional objectives for a unitllesson.
INTRODUCTION
In most open and distance learning systems print material is the chief
teaching medium. Teaching a learner through self-learning print materials
is different from any other kind of teaching. The process of designing,
developing and producing these materials is quite different from that used in
the production of text books, lecture notes, journal articles and training
manuals. However, it is important to remember that a distance teaching text
Factors in the Design of Print Materials
is not the same as a text book, because the material produced in print for
independent learning has to carry out all the functions a teacher who would
fulfil in a conventional situation such as guiding, motivating, explaining,
discussing, asking questions, assessing the learner's progress, giving
appropriate remedial measures, and providing advice. Those who are
writing distance teaching print materials have to consider the characteristics
of the print medium and how print is a convenient medium for the delivery
of educational material to remote students, who may not have access to new
technologies. Printed texts are comparatively cost-effective and easily
designed, developed and delivered. Print material is the most convenient
medium to work with, being self-contained, portable and easy to access. In
this unit, we will discuss the theories and principles on the basis of which
the distance teaching texts are developed.
It may happen sometimes that certain skills are adequately learned and
practiced by us without our being aware of the theoretical basis of those
skills or the principles behind their successful functioning. But if we know
the theories as well, the practice of our skills maybe improved. You may
drive a car well without being a car mechanic yourself, but if you also know
the mechanism, it may improve your efficiency as a driver. In the field of
education, your knowledge of various theories of learning will be very
useful when you consciously attempt to practice and improve your
teachingllearning skills.
The purpose of this unit is to acquaint you w.ith the concept of learning, the
various theories of learning and the learning outcomes in three domains:
cognitive, affective and psychomotor along with their implications in
designing print materials.
'Theories of Learning
'know' how a computer works, but may not be able to operate it. Thus, the
distinction between learning or the acquisition of knowledge (i.e. capability)
and performance (i.e. exhibiting this capability in some form of action) is an
important one. We use the term 'behavioural tendency' to maintain the
distinction between learning and performance. In this context when we
speak of relatively permanent change in behaviour, we refer to a change in
performance.
Concrete
Experience
1-Students make their own
observations
Testing implications
of concepts in new
situations
4
I
Reflection
generalisations
This cycle explains that the students are encouraged to reflect on their own
experiences and to come to conclusions that modify their cognitive
structures. They are then ready for the next cycle of experiential learning.
The learner's existing mental framework and learning needs are agents in
the interpretation and construction of knowledge.
But one of the limitations of this approach is that it does not fully take into
account the way in which social processes, such as peer interaction,
collaboration and the use of language, which contribute to learning. The
main emphasis of constructivism is on individual development through the
use of resources and on the accommodation of new experiences to existing
understanding.
The drill and practice approach of behaviourism makes the role of the
teacher redundant, while the constructivist approach reinstates learning by
discovery, where the role of the teacher is that of a facilitator, someone who
works in a supervisory capacity. You can see this difference from the figure
given below.
Feedback is providing the knowledge that the responses are correct or that
they require amendment, also functions as reinforcement in strengthening
the responses to be learned. The term 'feedback' refers to any information
that permits learners to judge the quality of their performance. There are
various ways in which feedback may be provided. They are immediate or
delayed or end-of-session feedback. The importance of supplying feedback
has led to several technological innovations, including programmed
instruction and computer assisted instruction. Learning efficiency often
increases when the student receives feedback about the quality of hisher
work. The teacher, whether in the classroom or in a distance learning
situation, needs to make systematic plans to provide feedback before
moving on to new learning materials. Available evidence indicates that
active response with direct feedback is superior to passive response with
indirect feedback.
integrates aspects or parts of the task into a whole (for example, relates
evidence to a conclusion), sees relationships between this whole and
previous knowledge; and
t i e s to understand the theories of the task; forms hypotheses. In other .
words if learners want to grow in understanding they will adopt a deep
level strategy.
The specific forms of approaches in the specific learning tasks and content
domain are researched by distance education practitioners. A large number
of studies have been carried out in which approaches to learning and the
outcomes of learning have been described. Marton and Booth (1996)
observed that the students adopted approaches to the tasks they undertook
according to their experience of those specific occ'asions. The outcomes of
those tasks were associated with the approaches adopted there, specific to
that situation. Some studies have indicated that individual students do
indeed adopt different approaches to particular tasks. Other researchers,
Factors in the Design of Print Materials
Deep Approach t~
"I generally put a lot of effort into trying to understand things which
initially seem difficult".
"I often find myself questioning things I read in books".
"I usually set out to understand thoroughly the meaning of what I am
asked to read".
Surface Approach
The features of learning that are typically associated with deep and surface
approaches were used by Biggs (1994) in developing questionnaires to
identify how students approach their study i.e., learning process
questionnaire and study process questionniire. These were used mainly in
Australia and Southeast Asia.
Kember (1996) has stated that deep learners begin with an intention to .
understand and maintain a vigorous interaction with content, whereas the
surface learner's main intention is to complete the task requirements, which
are regarded as external impositions. The implication is that deep learning
is somehow better than surface learning because 'understanding' is
achieved. ..
In this section we have discussed in detail the concept of learning. From the
analysis of the pedagogical structure of distance education, and principles of
andragogy, we can infer that learning is a 'central basic function of human
life' and the distance learners are very pragmatic about their studies and
tend to use the more flexible 'strategic' approach to learning. Learning in
adulthood becomes constructivist in approach when high flexibility s f the
learning and teaching strategies are aimed at bringing about quick changes
in content and media. The nature of these strategies is of paramount
importance in the design of learning materials and the development of a
suitable distance teaching paradigm, particularly if new technology is to be
used for delivery.
P
~ o t :ea) Write your answer in the space given below.
b) Compare your answer with the one given at the end of this unit.
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discuss in sections 1.3 and 1.4 are: behaviourism, cognitivism and the
possible synthesis of t6e two in section 1.5.
The early behaviourist, Edward L. Thorndike has put forward three main
laws of learning: The law of effect, the law of readiness and the law of
exercise. The law of effect stresses the importance of the effect of a
stimulus-response (S-R). Satisfying results reinforce the response while
inadequate results weaken it. Reward and punishment are, therefore,
important ingredients of learning. The law of readiness indicates the
learner's willingness to make (S-R) connection while the law of exercise is
related to the strengthening of the connection through practice.
Reinforcement
The most important aspect of Skinner's theory of learning relates to the role
of reinforcement. An organisdlearner is presented with a particular
stimulus - a reinforcer - after it makes a response. 1n.a given situation, the
organisdlearner will tend to repeat responses for which it is reinforced.
Educational implications
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Information processing
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where information can be retrieved in order to make a response. This
process maybe represented diagrammatically as follows :
Long-term
memory
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hisher interaction with the environment and stores this knowledge for use in
new situations.
Feedback
One of the important elements of cognitive approach is the notion of
'feedback': The learning situation is seen as one in which an individual
confronts a problem, develops a hypothesis based on the knowledge already
present in hisher memory and then tries it out. The consequences of h i s k
action then provide himher with the required feedback so that the correct
solutions are confirmed and the incorrect ones rejected.
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Bruner
- suggests that people have primary needs, other than animal drives.
One of these might be called 'curiosity' which keeps an organism active
even in the absence of organic states of tension. So our cognitive activity is
not always dominated only by the need for such things as food or sex.
Accordingly, Bruner thinks of learning as a goal directed activity which
satisfies this drive, and answers the curiosity of €he learner.
Autonomous learning
Bruner advocates autonomy in learning. He suggests that when the learner
is allowed to approach learning as an act of discovery, s h e will increasingly
engage himherself in learning, with the autonomy of self-reward. In other
words, the learner provides for hisher own stimulation and in this way -
,arouses his or her own curiosity.
The studies of Bruner and his associates indicate that learners can be tau&t
to generate their own instructional method and strategy for leaming. A
Theories of Learning
\
learner learns to shdy independently and acquires skills to establish hisher
own standard in the same way that any scientist/author/researcher does. In .
this way, the feedback needed from the teacher is at a minimum. Bruner
argues that the teacher's role here must be to create an environment in
which learners can learn on their own without the help of any pre-packaged
information. He suggests that learners should also learn through their active
involvement with content. His work was thus influential in the open school
movement and other humanistic approaches to learning. The most
important goal of education, Bruner feels, is to teach learners how to value
learning for its own sake, enabling them to acquire on their own the
knowledge they need.
In his theory of instruction, Bruner puts forth his original ideas concerning
the most effective way of achieving knowledge and skills. For him, a theory
of instruction should cover the following major aspects:
In section 1.3 and 1.4, we have discussed in detail the behaviourist and
cognitivist approaches to learning and their educational implications.
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aspects of a learner are 'his senses, his central nervous system, and his
muscles'.
Conditions
-. of learning
GagnC identifies eight conditions of learning, or learning types or varieties
of learning, beginning with the simple ones and ending with the complex
ones. Although Gagne refers to these conditions as learning types, he is
primarily interested in the observable behaviour and performance which are
the products of these conditions. In these conditions of learning he
combined the basic behaviourist view with cognitive theory to present a
hierarchical model of different types of learning. Here, we shall give a brief
description of the types of learning G a p e talks about.
Phases of learning
GagnC has identified nine stages of cognitive processing that are essential to
learning and which need to be executed in a sequential order. These stages
are: 1) gaining attention; 2) informing the learner of the objectives; 3) -
stimulating recall of prerequisite learning; 4) presenting the stimulus
material; 5) pro.viding learning guidance; 6) eliciting the performance; 7)
feedback about performance correctness; 8) assessing the
performance; 9) enhancing retention and transfer. By sequencing
instruction in this way, one creates external conditions which complement
the internal condition. These phases of learning are the typical series of
external and internal events that constitute a single learning act. The
internal conditions of learning include two factors- the learner's
psychological state and the cognitive processes required for learning. The
internal processes may be influenced by external events in the form of
environmental stimulation.
The importance of these phases is that they are present in every ac't of
learning and are performed in different ways for different varieties of
learning. They are: .
Preparation for learning initiates the individual into the learning task, while
acquisition and performance refer to the assimilation of the new knowledge
. Factors in the Design of Print Materials
or of the capability. Depending on the complexity of the skill to be learned,
these phases may require anything fromeoneto several sessions. Finally,
transfer of learning may take place sometime after the acquisition of the new
skill. A brief account of the categories is given below:
Intellectual skills are the most important ones, involving mental operations.
They include conceptualisation of the environment, differentiating things
from each other, understanding concepts, seeing relationships between
things. Reading, writing, and handling of numbers are the other abilities
which come under this variety of skill. These abilities range from the
simple to the complex.
Motor skill
-Motor skills are physical skills. These include the ability to perform a.
sequence of physical movements.
Cognitive strategies
Cognitive strategies refer to the learner's thinking, remembering and
learning-the procedures we use for ordering and processing information
internally. They are learned over long periods of time.
Attitudes
Attitudes are deep-rooted in us and we find it difficult to change thein:
They determine our predisposition towards positive or negative responses to
m object. Our attitudes strongly affect our motivation for learning.
iii) Cognitive process and instruction: The transfer of learning, the self-
management skills of the learner, and teaching learners the skills of problem
solving are integral parts of the internal conditions of learning, applicable to
Factors in the Design-bfPrint Materials
Point out at least four cognitivist and two behaviourist elements in GagnC's
synthesis of the two approaches to learning.
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OUTCOMES
The desirable outcome of learning experiences -the way individuals are to
act, think or feel as a result of participating in some instructional activities
-ciin be classified into three domains, viz. Cognitive, Aflective and
Psychomotor. Bloom and his associates classified educational behaviour
.from the simple to the complex. based on the level of learning and
Theories of Learning
iii) Application: It refers to the ability to use learned material in new and
concrete situations. It'is an act of putting theories, rules, methods, concepts,
principles or laws to practical uses or new situations. The specific learning
outcomes are: discovers, produces, relates, solves, uses and predicts.
iv) Analysis: It refers to the ability to break down material into its
component parts so that its organisational structure may be understood.
This may include the identification of the parts, finding out relationships
actors in the Design of Print Materials
between parts, and explaining the organizational principles involved. The
specific learning outcomes are: identifies, illustrates, sub-divides and
differentiates.
- definite criteria. Learning outcome in this area are the highest in the
cognitive hierarchy because they contain elements of all of the other
categories, plus value judgements based on clearly defined criteria. The
specific learning outcomes are: appraises, compares, justifies, summarises
w d supports.
ii) Responding: It refers t:o the active participation on the part of the
distance learner. The learner is sufficiently motivated to actively respond to
the stimuli, for exmple, he or she becomes eager to participate in the
cultural activities organisr:d by other countries. Learning outcomes in this
area may emphasise acquiescence in responding (a distance learner
completes assignments, p,articipates in teleconference and shows interest in
the subject). The specific learning outcomes are discusses, performs,
answers, presents and writes.
Theories of Learning
coordination.
6. Adaptation is concerned with skills that are so well developed that the
learner can modifj movement patterns to fit special requirements or to meet
a problem situation. The specific learning outcomes are: adapts, rearranges,
reorganises and revises etc.
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Bloom's model for levels of learning, but we have not in this unit related
them to distance learning as such. However, you will find a better and more
specific understanding of the implications of these theories for distance
education in unit 3 of this block.
i) ' By putting forth the three modes (i.e. enactive, iconic and
, symbolic) of the representation of knowledge, Bruner
recognises the role of the human mind in comprehending
reality.
ii) He views 'learning' as 'goal oriented', and not as a mere
biological or impulsive response to external stimuli.
Theories of Learning
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a) Cognitivist elements: d
i) information processing,
ii) intellectual skills-fiom the simple to the complex,
iii) recognition of individual and attitudinal differences in
learners, and
iv) transfer of knowledge and skills.
b) Behaviourist elements:
i) GagnC's emphasis on the observable behaviour and the
performance of the learner, and
ii) His dependence on the Stimulus-Response factor derived
fiom the theories of Thorndike and Skinner.