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Teaching, Learning, and Instructional Theories

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Learning theory: explains how humans learn, learner based ... Constructivism. Focus on students' ability to solve real-life, practical problems ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Teaching, Learning, and Instructional Theories


1
Teaching, Learning, and Instructional Theories
2
  • Teaching theory ways to teach, teacher based,
    often content based
  • Learning theory explains how humans learn,
    learner based
  • Instructional theory ways of facilitating human
    learning and development, learner and instruction
    based

3
John B. CarrolModel of School Learning
Degree of learning f(time actually
spent/time needed) 1. Time allowed 2.
Perseverence 3. Aptitude 4. Quality of
instruction 5. Ability to understand the
instruction
4
B.F. Skinner
Theories of Learning
  • Positive reinforcement
  • Negative reinforcement
  • Punishment

5
Positive reinforcement
Stimulus -gt increase in desired behavior Study
hard -gt earn praise or good grades
(positive reinforcement)
6
Negative reinforcement
Avoiding or removing a stimulus -gt increase in
desired behavior Student is quiet in class -gt
avoids going to detention (Desired behavior)
(negative reinforcement)
7
Punishment
Undesirable consequences -gt decrease in desired
behavior Misbehave in school -gt knows she will
get grounded at home (undesirable behavior)
(punishment)
8
Information Processing Theory
Model of the Human Memory System
Lost
Lost
Lost
Sensory Register
Long- Term Register
Working(Short-Term)Memory
Input
Attention
Input
Rehearsal Meaningful Learning Organizing Elabora
ting Imagery
9
Jean Piaget
Theories of Cognitive Development in Children
  • Sensorimotor stage
  • Preoperational stage
  • Concrete stage
  • Formal operation stage

10
Sensorimotor stage
Birth to about 2 years Explore world through
senses and motor activity Early stages cant
differentiate between themselves and world around
them Begin to have some perception of cause and
effect ability to follow something with their
eyes
11
Preoperational stage
About age 2 to about age 7 Develop greater
ability with speech Engage in symbolic activities
(drawing, pretending, Imagining Develop numeric
abilities (assign a number to an
object) Increase in self-control Cant do
conservation tasks
12
  • Concrete stage

About age 7 to about age 11 Increase in abstract
reasoning ability Increase in ability to
generalize from concrete experiences Can do
conservation tasks
13
Formal operation stage
About age 12 to about age 15 Can form and test
hypotheses, organize information, and reason
scientifically Can show results of abstract
thing in the form of symbolic materials
(writing, drama)
14
Piagets Basic Assumptions of Children
  • Active and motivated learners
  • Knowledge becomes more integrated and organized
    over time
  • Learn through processes of assimilation and
    accommodation
  • Development depends on interaction with ones
    physical and social environment
  • Processes of equilibration help to develop
    increasingly complex levels of thought
  • Occurs only after certain genetically controlled
    neurological changes occur
  • Occurs in four qualitatively different stages

15
Jerome Bruner
Learning as Discovery
  • Enactive stage
  • Iconic stage
  • Symbolic stage

16
Enactive stage
Birth to about age 3 Perceive environment solely
through actions they initiate Describe and
explain objects in terms of what they can do with
them
17
Iconic stage
About age 3 to about age 8 Remember and us
information through imagery Visual memory
increase and they can imagine or think about
actions without experiencing them Decisions are
made on the basis of perceptions, rather than
language
18
Symbolic stage
From about age 8 Use symbols to represent
people, activities, and things Ability to think
and talk about things in abstract terms
19
Bruners Six Benchmarks
  • Respond to situations in varied ways, rather then
    always in the same way
  • Internalize event into a storage system that
    corresponds to the environment
  • Have increased capacity for language
  • Can interact systematically with a tutor (parent,
    teacher, or other role model)
  • Use language as an instrument for ordering the
    environment
  • Have increasing capacity to deal with multiple
    demands

20
Bruner and Discovery Learning
  • Credited with the idea of discovery learning
  • Children more likely to understand and remember
    concepts they had discovered in the course of
    their own exploration
  • Mixed results with research

21
Constructivism
  • Focus on students ability to solve real-life,
    practical problems
  • Methods call for students to construct knowledge
    themselves
  • Typically work in cooperative groups
  • Tend to focus on projects that require solutions
    to problems
  • Usually time-consuming
  • Can be rich learning environments

22
Domains of Learning
  • Cognitive
  • Affective
  • Psychomotor

23
Cognitive
  • Knowledge
  • Comprehension
  • Application
  • Analysis
  • Synthesis
  • Evaluation

24
Affective
  • Receiving
  • Responding
  • Valuing
  • Organization
  • Characterization of a value complex

25
Psychomotor
  • Gross body movement
  • Finely coordinated movements
  • Nonverbal communication
  • Speech behaviors

26
Benjamin Bloom
Uniform Instruction per Learner
Aptitude
27
Benjamin Bloom
Uniform Instruction per Learner
Aptitude
Achievement
28
Benjamin Bloom
Uniform Instruction per Learner
Aptitude
Achievement
29
Benjamin Bloom
Uniform Instruction per Learner
Aptitude
Achievement
Optimal Instruction per Learner
Aptitude
30
Benjamin Bloom
Uniform Instruction per Learner
Aptitude
Achievement
Optimal Instruction per Learner
Aptitude
Achievement
31
Benjamin Bloom
Uniform Instruction per Learner
Aptitude
Achievement
Optimal Instruction per Learner
Aptitude
Achievement
32
Rotters Locus of Control
  • Based on Social Learning Theory
  • Measured on a continuum

Internal External
33
Rotters Locus of Control
  • Based on Social Learning Theory
  • Measured on a continuum

Internal External
Outcome is contingent upon No perceived
contingency his or her own behavior
between outcome and behavior Low
grade blame self blame teacher High
grade because you are smart because
teacher is excellent
34
Left Brain Right Brain
35
Left Brain Right Brain
  • Logical
  • Sequential
  • Rational
  • Analytical
  • Objective
  • Looks at parts

36
Left Brain Right Brain
  • Logical
  • Sequential
  • Rational
  • Analytical
  • Objective
  • Looks at parts
  • Random
  • Intuitive
  • Holistic
  • Synthesizing
  • Subjective
  • Looks at wholes

37
Gagnes Events of Instruction
  • Gain attention
  • Inform the leaner of the objective
  • Stimulate recall of prerequisite learning
  • Present new material
  • Provide learning guidance
  • Elecite performance
  • Provide feedback about correctness
  • Assess performance
  • Enhance retention and recall

38
Gagnes Types of Learning
  • Intellectual skills
  • Problem solving
  • Higher-order rules
  • Defined concepts
  • Concrete concepts
  • Discrimination
  • Cognitive strategies
  • Verbal information
  • Motor skills
  • Attitudes

39
Gagnes Implications for Education
  • His learning hierarchies have been used to
    develop systematic instructional design
    principles
  • Most effective in training for business, industry
    and military
  • Some K-12 schools have used his learning
    hierarchy approach for sequencing skills in
    curriculum development projects
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