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COGNITIVE THEORIES OF LEARNING

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Title: COGNITIVE THEORIES OF LEARNING


1
COGNITIVE THEORIES OF LEARNING
  • Introduction
  • Meaning of Cognition
  • Information Processing Approach

2
Introduction
  • Cognitive psychology re-emerged in 1960s.
  • By then, Cognitive learning theories started to
    dominate ideas about learning and criticized
    behavioral learning theories.

3
What is cognition?
  • Cognition, according to Hamilton, I (199520) in
    the Dictionary of Cognitive Psychology is the
    understanding, acquisition and processing
    knowledge, or more loosely thought processes.
  • Cognitive learning theories deal with the way
    human being acquires and understands knowledge
    through thinking.
  • All explanation about how human being acquires
    and understands knowledge through thinking.

4
Information Processing Approach
  • Information processing approach is the first
    serious movement of cognitive psychology.
  • It is concerned with how
  • human being acquires, processes, retains and
    retrieves information.
  • people remember and forget information.
  • Psychologists work on different aspects in this
    approach. For example, Siegler worked on
    attention in memory formation and Flavell worked
    on expansion of memory capabilities (Passer and
    Smith2001467).

5
  • Related to learning, it studies how the learner
    receives information from the environment and
    uses it in the learning process.
  • Understanding how students acquire, process,
    retain and retrieve information will enable the
    teacher to help learners learn effectively.
  • Remembering is an important condition for
    learning.
  • If learners remember what they learn, their
    learning will be incapacitated.

6
Concept of Memory and its storage systems
  • Memory keeping facts or experiences in mind and
    be able to retrieve it when needed.
  • Three types of memory storage systems
  • sensory memory
  • short term memory and
  • long term memory.

7
MEMORY SYSTEMS
8
  • Promoting sensory registration
  • The teacher must
  • avoid giving too much information
  • pause at every stage or step
  • make learners aware of the important information
  • help learners use as many sense organs as
    possible.

9
  • Promoting sensory memory
  • Teachers should
  • present little information
  • involve short time activities (opportunity to
    rehearse)
  • organize and link well the information with other
    materials to be learnt and previous information.

10
  • Long Term Memory
  • Information held in Short Term Memory is
    transferred in to Long Term Memory.
  • LTM has very large capacity to store.
  • Information in LTM is retained for a long time
    and will never be forgotten.
  • Failure to retrieve it may be due to some factors.

11
  • Types of memory
  • Episodic, Semantic and Procedural.
  • Episodic memory/images pictorial representations
    of information like images of personal
    experiences or events what one did or saw.
  • Semantic memory stores facts and general
    knowledge concepts, principles, learning
    strategies or problem solving skills.
  • Procedural memory stores information of how to
    do things or how to perform intellectual tasks
    how to operate a computer or to build a house.

12
  • Forgetting
  • Failure to retain information in the long term
    memory or unable to retrieve already available
    information.
  • Why do we forget?
  • Forgetting is caused by
  • Information interference mixed up of
    information, information is pushed aside or
    inhibited.
  • This happens when two pieces of information
    appear to be similar or too much a like and there
    were no cues to differentiate them.
  • One is lost or confused with another because of
    lack of sufficient learning.

13
  • The interval is too short
  • One information has not been well comprehended
  • Two types of interference/inhibition
  • Retroactive inhibition
  • Proactive inhibition
  • Proactive inhibition failure to learn new
    information because is interfered by previously
    learned information.
  • Retroactive inhibition failure to recall
    previously learned information due to learning
    new information.

14
  • Emotional state on a material, process, teacher
    or when doing an action affect remembering,
    example fear, hate, sadness disappointment or
    lack of interest.
  • Fatigue it is difficult to retrieve or retain
    information.
  • It affects the work of sense organs, attention
    and concentration.
  • Unorganized information Organization facilitates
    the work of the schema.
  • Information which is not interrelated or is in
    illogical sequence is hard to organize in a
    mental schema.

15
  • No rehearsal large amount of information, noise
    some emotions or lack of chance to rehearse.
  • Encoding failure the information has never been
    encoded so it has not been transferred neither to
    STM nor to LTM.
  • Motivated forgetting bad, traumatic, shameful
    information are intentionally repressed as they
    bring out bad feelings.
  • Memory Strategies
  • Engagement in meaningful practices and using
    variety of visual aids assist in using many sense
    organs in learning.

16
  • Good organization and presentation of material.
  • Interrelation of facts and ideas can be captured
    easily and so makes mental schema to work more
    effectively.
  • Frequent revision and practice
  • Mass learning Practice newly learned information
    intensely until it is thoroughly learned.
  • Distributed practice Spread several shorter
    sessions over a few days and guide students to
    practice a little each day through home work or
    class work.
  • This leads to better retention.

17
  • Part learning Breaking the long list of items
    into smaller list.
  • Encourage learners to learn part of a thing
    separately.
  • Over-learning Continuous practice of the learned
    material beyond the point of recall or initial
    learning. This help long term retention
  • Teaching by association using examples, real
    objects, illustrations, pictures or models.
  • Association provides memory cues. One thing
    stimulates remembering of another.
  • Motivation promotes interest and feelings of
    need and meaningfulness of a material.

18
  • This will reinforce attention, concentration and
    rehearsal.
  • Give an outline in the beginning of the lesson
    and summary at the end due to primary and recent
    effects of information.
  • Primary information draws more attention to the
    learner while recent information is not affected
    by intervening information.
  • Using elaborative rehearsal
  • This helps in deeper information processing. Ask
    the students the meaning of a concepts at every
    step.

19
  • The use of mnemonics these are cues that aid
    memory. They are used to form mental images to
    help remember associations.
  • Types of mnemonics
  • Yodai mnemonic each word in a piece of
    information to be remembered is given another
    more familiar name.
  • Peg word method List of facts is linked with
    images two- shoe, three- tree, four-door,
  • Initial letter strategies make acronyms like
    BODMAS.

20
References
  • Elliot et al (2000) Educational Psychology
    Effective Teaching, Effective Learning Boston
    McGraw Hill.


  • Hamilton, I (1995) Dictionary of Cognitive
    Psychology. Methuen
  • Passer, M Smith, R (2001)Psychology Frontiers
    and Application. Boston McGraw Hill.
  • Slavin, R (1988) Educational Psychology Theory
    into Practice. Englewood Cliffs Prentice Hall.
  • Snowman, J. McCown R. Biehler, R (2009)
    Psychology Applied to Teaching (12th edition).
    Belmont Wadsworth, Cengage Learning.
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