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Learning to Learn

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Tack your posters to the wall. Gather around them. ... A positive emotional and motivational climate is a necessary condition for deep learning. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Learning to Learn


1
Learning to Learn
Kristina Edström, KTH Learning Lab,
kristina_at_kth.se
2
"Good" and "bad" learning
Think back on one example of "good" learning, and
one example of "bad" learning, in your
experience. It can be in or outside school.
("Good" learning means that you really understand
and can use the knowledge, and you retain it for
long time.)
  • Make notes on each of the examples. Focus on your
    own role, what you did and how it felt. (6 min)
  • Work in pairs compare your experiences. Try to
    find issues that your stories have in common.
    Take notes. (10 min)
  • Form groups of four Find the recurring themes,
    what you most seem to associate with good and bad
    learning. Write keywords on poster sheets. (20
    min)

3
"Good" and "bad" learning (cont)
  • Tack your posters to the wall. Gather around
    them.
  • Each group will in turn choose one item from
    their poster and explain it to us.
  • For each item Can we together suggest a way to
    translate that particular wisdom into to a
    strategy which you can use to improve your
    learning?

4
My life is my responsibility
Other factors
What I caninfluence
The thought "If only the teacher" is a trap!
5
4 principles of "good" learning
  • Motivational context
  • Deep learning is more likely when the student
    experiences a need to know something in order to
    carry out tasks which matter to them.
  • Students need to be involved in selecting what is
    to be learnt and in planning how the learning
    should take place in order to experience
    ownership.
  • A positive emotional and motivational climate is
    a necessary condition for deep learning.

Biggs
6
4 principles of "good" learning
  • Learner activity
  • Students need to be active rather than passive.
    Deep learning is associated with doing. If the
    learner is actively involved, then more
    connections will be made both with past learning
    and between new concepts.
  • Doing is not sufficient for learning, however.
    Learning activity must be planned, reflected upon
    and processed, and related to abstract
    conceptions.

Biggs
7
4 principles of "good" learning
  • Interaction with others
  • It is often easier to negociate meaning and to
    manipulate ideas with others than alone.
  • Interaction can take many forms .
  • Students teaching each other is a very effective
    method for learning, however it is the student
    who teaches who will learn more than the student
    who is taught.

Biggs
8
4 principles of "good" learning
  • Well-structured knowledge base
  • It is vital that students existing knowledge and
    experience are brought to bear in learning.
  • The subject matter must be well structured and
    integrated.
  • The structure of knowledge is more visible to and
    more useful to students where it is clearly
    displayed, where content is taught in integrated
    wholes, rather than in small separate pieces, and
    where knowledge is required to be related to
    other knowledge rather than learned in isolation.

Biggs
9
Why does one end up in this position?
10
Change the model - active learning
Teachers, advisors
Student- active- responsible
Tasks, assignments challenges
Theory, Literature
Peers
11
Deep and surface strategy of learning
  • Intention to understand and learn
  • Leads to well-structured knowledge, that can be
    applied, long retention
  • Positive feelings
  • Intrinsic motivation
  • Intention to pass the course(typically exam)
  • Leads to poorly structured knowledge which soon
    deteriorates
  • Negative feelings
  • Extrinsic motivation

Marton Säljö 1976, Biggs 2003
12
Deep or surface strategy is not an attribute of
the student
  • "I read very slowly, trying to concentrate on
    what it means. There's a lot of meaning behind
    it. You mustn't regurgitate because that's not
    the idea with the exercise. Rather getting it all
    together."
  • "Getting enough facts so that you can write
    something relevant in the exam. I know what I've
    got to write about without really thinking about
    it really. I know the facts about it and
    regurgitate."

13
Surface strategy - factors
  • A heavy workload
  • Relatively high class contact hours
  • An excessive amount of course material
  • A lack of opportunity to pursue subjects in depth
  • A lack of choice over subjects and method of
    study
  • A threatening and anxiety provoking assessment
    system

Gibbs 1992
14
  • Motivation can be created in the course

"With some courses I can feel Oh no, not another
math course. But then you get some understanding
for something in that course and then it feels
great fun in a way." "The interest for the
subject is the most important. It can be an prior
interest or it can be created during the course."
"If you get the right answer on a calculation
assignment you continue with the next one and it
gets fun. If its difficult you get unmotivated
and you spend less time on it. One should really
put more time into things that work badly but it
doesnt work that way."
15
A monster you faceis never quite so scaryas one
you don't.
16
Professionally relevant competencies for an
engineer
  • Technical / disciplinary competencies
  • Professional competencies
  • Working effectively with others
  • Oral written communication, in Swedish and
    English, with different target groups
  • Professional ethics
  • Personal competencies
  • Engagement, judgment, independence, vision,
    endurance, belief in what you do, driving force,
    courage, presence, focus, motivation, energi,
    creativity, integrity

17
What am I able to do as a result of learning in
the course?
Objectives
Teaching Learning
Assessment
What work should I do to reach the objectives?
What do I have to perform to demonstrate that I
have reached the objectives?
18
What is the aim with project work in my education?
Project goal
19
5 practical tips
20
1
The secret of success is constancy of
purpose. Benjamin Disraeli
21
2
Study in informal study groups.
22
3
Connect theory to applications,examples and
reality.
23
4
Prepare and follow up onyour learning
activities.
24
5
Reflect on your study habits,in order to improve
them.
25
No pain, no gain
What really puts demands on you, things you have
to fight for - theyre all worthwhile
afterwards.Even if its hell at the
time.Whereas you can barely remember something
that comes to you easily.
Lena Endre on working with director Ingemar
Bergman
26
  • Good luck!
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