THE
LEARNING THEORIES
Learning Theory describe how students absorb, process, and
retain knowledge during learning. Cognitive, emotional, and environmental influences,
as well as prior experience, all play a part in how understanding, or a world
view, is acquired or changed and knowledge and skills retained.
Behaviorists look at learning as an aspect of conditioning and advocate a system of
rewards and targets in education. Educators who embrace cognitive theory believe that the
definition of learning as a change in behaviour is too narrow, and study the
learner rather than their environment—and in particular the complexities of
human memory.
Those who advocate constructivism believe
that a learner's ability to learn relies largely on what they already know and
understand, and the acquisition of knowledge should be an individually tailored
process of construction. Transformative learning theory
focuses on the often-necessary change required in a learner's preconceptions
and world view. Geographical learning theory focuses on the ways that contexts
and environments shape the learning process.
Outside the realm of educational psychology, techniques to
directly observe the functioning of the brain during the learning process, such
as event-related potential and functional magnetic resonance imaging,
are used in educational neuroscience. The theory of multiple intelligences,
where learning is seen as the interaction between dozens of different
functional areas in the brain each with their own individual strengths and
weaknesses in any particular human learner, has also been proposed, but
empirical research has found the theory to be unsupported by evidence.
THREE LEARNING THEORIES
Learning Theories are frameworks that are extensively used
by Instructional Designers to meet the requirements of the target audience and
the situation.
To do justice to this mandate, an Instructional Designer
must first understand the Learning Theories in order to apply them. Once they
understand the strengths and weaknesses of each Learning Theory, they can
optimise their use. In this blog, I provide an introduction to three
traditional Learning Theories, namely:
1.
Behaviourism
2.
Cognitivism
3.
Constructivism
Furthermore, I show examples that illustrate how they can
be used in designing eLearning courses.
THE PERSONAL FAMILY
BEHAVIOURAL THEORY
Behavioral
Theories: the history of psychology is the history of a field
struggling to define itself as a separate and unique scientific discipline.
(Hockenbury, 3) While the roots of psychology date back to the philosophers of
Ancient Greece, it wasn’t until 1879, when German psychologist Wilhelm Wundt
created the first laboratory completely devoted to the study of psychology.
(Kleinman, 7)
The history (of the
study of behavior) is built upon the theories and discoveries of successive
generations, with many of the older theories remaining relevant to contemporary
psychologists. The behaviorists felt that it was impossible to study mental
processes objectively, but found it relatively easy to observe and measure
behavior. (Collin, 10) Editor’s note - behaviorism, cognitivism, and
psychoanalytic theory are considered ‘grand theories of psychology.’ This means
they are comprehensive theories which have traditionally inspired and directed
psychologists’ thinking. Psychology's grand theories also refer to 'psychology
schools' and 'psychology therapies’ and behavioral theories are also referred
to as ‘psychology theories.’
COGNITIVIST THEORY
Cognitivism is a learning theory
that focuses on the processes involved in learning rather than on the observed
behavior. As opposed to Behaviorists, Cognitivists do not require an outward
exhibition of learning, but focus more on the internal processes and
connections that take place during learning. Cognitivism contends that “the
black box” of the mind should be opened and understood. The learner is viewed
as an information processor. Knowledge can be seen as schema or
symbolic mental constructions and learning is defined as change in a learner’s
schemata. Some important classroom principles from cognitive psychology include meaningful learning, organization, and elaboration.
CONSTRUCTIVIST THEORY
Constructivism in education is an epistemological perspective
of learning focused on how students actively create (or “construct”) knowledge
out of their experiences. Emphasis is placed on agency and prior
"knowing" and experience of the learner, which is often determined by
their social and cultural contexts environment. While Behaviorist models
of learning may help understand what students are doing, educators also need to
know what students are thinking, and how to enrich what students are thinking.
Constructivism can be traced back to educational psychology in the work
of Jean Piaget (1896–1980)
identified with Piaget's theory of cognitive
development, and from Lev Vygotsky's
(1896-1934) social constructivism.
Piaget focused on how humans make meaning in relation to the interaction between
their experiences and
their ideas.
His views tended to focus on human development in relation to what is occurring
with an individual as distinct from development influenced by
other persons. Vygotsky emphasized the importance of sociocultural
learning; how interactions with adults, more capable peers, and cognitive tools
are internalized by learners to form mental constructs through the zone of proximal development. Expanding
upon Vygotsky's theory Jerome Bruner and
other educational psychologists developed the important concept of instructional scaffolding, whereby the
social or informational environment offers supports (or scaffolds) for learning
that are gradually withdrawn as they become internalized.
Views more focused on human development in the
context of the social world include the sociocultural or socio-historical
perspective of Lev Vygotsky and the situated cognitionperspectives of Mikhail
Bakhtin, Jean Lave and Etienne
Wenger;[3] Brown,
Collins and Duguid; Newman, Griffin and Cole, and Barbara
Rogoff.
The concept of
constructivism has influenced a number of disciplines, including psychology, sociology, education and
the history of science.[7] During
its infancy, constructivism examined the interaction between human experiences
and their reflexes or behavior-patterns. Piaget called these systems of
knowledge "schemes."
Schemes
are not to be confused with schema, a term that comes from schema theory, which is from information-processing perspectives
on human cognition. Whereas Piaget's schemes are content-free, schemata
(the plural of schema) are concepts; for example, most humans have a schema for "grandmother",
"egg",
or "magnet."
Constructivism does not refer to a specific pedagogy,
although it is often confused with constructionism, an educational theory developed by Seymour
Papert, inspired by constructivist and experiential learning ideas of
Piaget.
Piaget's
theory of constructivist learning has had wide-ranging impact on learning theories and teaching
methods in education, and is an underlying theme of education
reform movements. Research support for constructivist teaching
techniques has been mixed, with some studies in support and others
contradicting constructivist results.
THE SOCIAL FAMILY
In the context of human society,
a family (from Latin: familia) is a group of people related
either by consanguinity (by recognized birth), affinity (by
marriage or other relationship), or co-residence (as implied by the etymology
of the English word "family") or some combination of these.
Members of the immediate family may
include spouses, parents, brothers, sisters, sons, and daughters. Members
of the extended family may include grandparents, aunts, uncles, cousins,
nephews, nieces, and siblings-in-law. Sometimes these are also
considered members of the immediate family, depending on an individual's
specific relationship with them.
In most societies, the family is the
principal institution for the socialization of
children. As the basic unit for raising children, anthropologists generally
classify most family organizations as matrifocal (a
mother and her children); conjugal (a wife, her husband, and children, also
called the nuclear family); avuncular (for
example, a grandparent, a brother, his sister, and her children); or extended (parents
and children co-reside with other members of one parent's family). Sexual
relations among the members are regulated by rules concerning incest such
as the incest taboo.
THE INFORMATION PROCESSING FAMILY
Joyce and Weil (1985) define models of teaching as a plan or
pattern that can be used to shape curriculum, to design instructional
materials, and to guide instruction in the classroom and other settings. Models
of teaching differ from general approaches of teaching in that they are
designed to realize specific instructional objectives. General approaches of
teaching are considered to be applicable to all teaching situations. They are
prescriptive teaching strategies to realize specific instructional goals. By
exploring many sources, Joyce and Weil have grouped the models on the basis of
specific educational goals and means into the following four families:
1. Information
processing models
2. Social
interaction models
3. Personal
development models
4. Behaviour
modification models
Information Processing Models
The term ‘information processing’ has been introduced by Joyce and Weils
(1972). In their words, Information processing refers to the ways
people handle stimuli from the environment, organize data, sense problems,
generate concepts and solutions to problems and employ verbal and non-verbal
symbols.
Thus, the information processing models are more concerned with the
intellectual growth rather than the emotional or social development of the
individual. They are oriented toward the information capacity of the students.
Some information processing models are to concern with the ability of the
learner to solve problems and thus emphasis productive thinking, other, are
concerned with general intellectual ability.
The teaching models in this family emphasize peoples’
desires to make sense of the world by gathering and organizing data,
determining problems, and finding solutions. Models are put into the
Information Processing family if they seek ways of helping process information
better and if their goal is to help students become more powerful learners.
THE BEHAVIOURAL SYSTEM FAMILY
Behavioral
Systems Family of Models: Principles
- · Behavior is an Observable, Identifiable Phenomenon
- ·
Maladaptive Behaviors are Acquired
- ·
Behavioral Goals are Specific,
Discrete, and Individual
- ·
Behavioral Theory Focuses on the
Here-and-Now
Behavioral
Systems Family of Models: Tips for Teaching
- •
Use positive rules with positive
reinforcers
- •
Praise on-task students rather than
reprimanding off-task students
- •
Allow students to teach themselves
when possible because it allows students to control their own learning
schedule.
- •
Teach students relaxation techniques
and allow them to regulate their own behavior
- •
When students are anxious or
fidgety, do not provide negative reinforcement.
- •
Allowing students to score their own
work and correct their own papers provides motivation.
THE PERSONAL FAMILY
The family is a domestic group with a lasting association, which
the members may or not be biologically related. It functions as a unit for the
purposes of resource sharing and providing mutual emotional support while
perpetuating tradition and values.
This definition incorporates several parts of familial
components. The structure is defined within the first sentence. The function of
the family in this definition is present in the second part of the definition.
Both the cultural and emotional aspects are integrated into the functioning of
the family as a unit. While my definition is fairly broad, it still lacks
familial roles and procedures, and legalities. In doing so it disregards sexual
regulations and the possibility to grant services. Here two problems lie. One
is that the more inclusive the definition of family, the less meaningful it
becomes. Then another problem is created given that most Americans desire to be
part of a "family" and want to be incorporated into its official
definition yet not everyone fits the same mold. Hence the question of who or
what a family is cannot be answered. Therefore the very definition of what
constitutes a family needs to be evaluated.
THANK YOU
No comments:
Post a Comment