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Complex Cognitive Processes

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Students must be exposed to a number of different strategies, not only general ... students practice the skill in authentic conditions (like those that will exist ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Complex Cognitive Processes


1
Complex Cognitive Processes
  • Teaching for Transfer
  • Based on work by Woolfolk, 2005

2
Transfer
  • Recall the important factors to learning
  • Students must be cognitively engaged
  • Students must invest effort
  • Students must think and process deeply
  • Students must regulate and monitor their own
    learning

3
Learning Strategies and Tactics
  • Research had indicated
  • Students must be exposed to a number of different
    strategies, not only general learning strategies
    but also very specific tactics
  • Students should be taught conditional knowledge
    about when, where, and why to use various
    strategies
  • Students may know when and how to use a strategy,
    but unless they also develop the desire to employ
    these skills, general learning ability will not
    improve

4
Deciding what is important
  • Students often focus on seductive details maybe
    because they are more interesting
  • Some learning strategies that may be helpful
  • Having students summarize material can often be
    helpful, but students often dont know how to
    summarize without being taught. By asking
    students to write a topic sentence for each
    paragraph or section, identify big ideas that
    cover several points, find supporting information
    for those big ideas, and avoid including
    redundant information and unnecessary details,
    teachers can help students learn to summarize
    well.

5
Visual Tools for Organizing
  • Visual strategies can be useful when trying to
    help students make connections and show
    relationships between ideas
  • Graphic organizers (maps, charts, etc., may be
    more effective than outlining)
  • Venn Diagrams
  • Concept Map
  • Hierarchical Graphic Depictions
  • Tree diagram
  • Timelines
  • Go to this site to learn more about graphic
    organizers (remember to right click on the link
    and open the link in a new window)

6
Reading Strategies
  • The following are reading strategies that help
    students comprehend better what they are reading.
    Youll know about some of these. There are
    others as well. Remember to right click on the
    links and open them in a new browser window.
  • READS ( Students Review headings and subheadings,
    Examine boldface words, Ask what do I expect to
    learn, Do it (read), Summarize
  • SQ3R
  • PQ4R
  • CAPS (Students as themselves who are the
    Characters, what is the Aim of the story, what
    Problem happens, how is the problem Solved) this
    is a strategy for narrative texts
  • KWL
  • For each, you should know
  • The grade level it is appropriate for
  • The type of texts it is appropriate for
  • The specific steps of the strategy

7
Applying Learning Strategies
  • Even if students have a repertoire of powerful
    learning strategies, what types of things must be
    in place for them to use them?
  • Learning task must be appropriate
  • Students must care about learning and
    understanding
  • They must have goals that can be reached using
    strategies
  • They must believe that the effort and investment
    to use strategies is reasonable
  • They must believe they are capable of using the
    sophisticated strategies

8
A Contemporary View of Transfer
  • Transfer occurs when you use something previously
    learned to help you solve a current problem, or
    when solving a previous problem affects how you
    solve a new problem
  • Low road transfer is spontaneous and automatic
    transfer of highly practiced skills. There is not
    much need for reflection This would be a highly
    practiced skill, used often, but in a variety of
    situations, until it is automatic. Ex. Transfer
    of browsing skills from IE to Firefox transfer
    of Microsoft skills from Word to PowerPoint, etc.
  • High-road transfer is the application of abstract
    knowledge learned in one situation to a different
    situation
  • Forward reaching transfer is learning a principle
    or strategy that you intend to use in the future
    for a different purpose
  • Backward reaching transfer is when you are faced
    with a problem and you look back to other
    situations to figure out how to solve the new
    problem
  • Negative transfer is when the effect of past
    learning is not positive. Functional fixedness
    and response set are examples of these (they are
    attempts to apply familiar but inappropriate
    strategies to a new situation)

9
Teaching for Positive Transfer
  • Transfer is very difficult
  • Research has found that people do not always
    apply school learning to problems they encounter
    in real life
  • Because knowledge is learned as a tool to solve
    particular problems, we may not realize that the
    knowledge is relevant when we encounter a problem
    that seems different
  • How can you make sure that your students will use
    what they learn, even when situations change?
  • Keep students actively engaged make sure they
    are active in the learning process
  • Greater transfer can be ensured by overlearning,
    for example
  • Provide students with instruction about a
    strategy and how to use it allow them to
    rehearse the strategy and practice being aware of
    how and when to use it
  • Provide practice with feedback
  • Provide new problems that can be solved with the
    same strategy, even though the problem is
    slightly different on the surface
  • Point out to students how the strategy will help
    them
  • Help students practice the skill in authentic
    conditions (like those that will exist when the
    skills are needed later)
  • Involve families
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