Title: MIT6001 IT in EducationAn Overview 2nd term
1MIT6001 IT in EducationAn Overview (2nd
term)1 Establishing the Psychological
Framework December 16, 2005
- Dr. Peter Chan ?????
- Asst Professor of Instructional Technology,
- Brigham Young University Hawaii
- Visiting Professor,
- Chinese University of Hong Kong
2Beliefshttp//www.ed.uiuc.edu/EPS/PES-yearbook/96
_docs/orton.htmlChan, P. (2005) Examining the
Psychological Impact of Video Cases for Teacher
Education. Paper presented at the International
Conference on Computers in Education, Singapore.
- A teachers belief affects student learning,
teacher learning, instructional methods,
technological implementation strategies, etc. - What are your beliefs of a teacher? Example
- Draft, share, continue (3 to 5 points)
- What are your beliefs of a learner? Example
- Draft, share, continue
- What are you beliefs about technology in
education? - Draft, share, continue
3Exercise Lesson Plan
- Draft a plan for a 50 min lesson
- The lesson plan should state the following
- Purposes
- Learning outcomes
- Activities
- Technology
- Strategies for ensuring learning
- Audience, schedule
- Rationale
4Hard vs. Soft Technologies
- Hard technology products
- E.g. computers, satellites
- Soft technology processes
- Ways of thinking about problems
- Strategies for solving instructional problems
5Learning
- The development of new knowledge, skills, or
attitudes as an individual interacts with
information and environment - How instructors view the role of media and
technology in the classroom depends on their
beliefs about how people learn. - Some prominent theories of learning
- Behaviorism, constructivism, social-culturalism
6Behaviorist Perspectivehttp//www.dmu.ac.uk/jame
sa/learning/behaviour.htm
- Classical conditioning (Ivan Pavlov)
- Operant conditioning
- (B. F. Skinner)
http//www.duq.edu/tomei/ed711psy/doggie.gif
http//www.vetmed.auburn.edu/ibds/images/sb.gif
7- http//inside.salve.edu/walsh/class_oper_comp.jpg
8Behaviorist Perspective (cont)
- Leads to programmed instruction improved
instructional design - Example http//www.centerforpi.com/cgi-local/What
IsPI_MainMenu.pl - Relies solely on observable behaviors and not
speculate on what goes on internally - Limited application in designing instruction for
higher-level skill
9Constructivist Perspective http//carbon.cudenver.
edu/mryder/itc_data/constructivism.html
- Individuals construct their own understanding of
the world - Learning constructing meaning
- Learning in the context of the student
- Understanding parts in the context of wholes
- Understanding students mental models ? effective
teaching
10Constructivist Perspective
- Learning constructing ones own knowledge by
integrating new information into current schema
(mental structure) - Disequilibrium mental conflict which demands
resolution - Assimilation If the new information makes sense
to the existing mental structure of the learner,
then the new information item is incorporated
into the structure. - Accommodation If the new information is very
different from the existing mental structure of
the learner, they are either rejected or
transformed in ways so that it fits into the
structure. - Learning communities, authentic tasks,
student-centered, real-world, hands-on
11Constructivist Perspective (cont)
http//www.funderstanding.com/constructivism.cfm
- engagement of students in meaningful experiences
as the essence of learning ? learners create own
interpretations of world - Customized vs. standardized curriculum
- Encourage students to analyze, interpret, and
predict information - Open-ended questions extensive dialogue
- Behaviorists the mind can be mapped by the
instructor - Constructivists instructors should provide ways
to assemble knowledge, not to dispense facts
12Constructivist Perspectives (cont)
- Jean Piaget, Jerome Bruner, John Dewey, David
Jonassen - Lead to advanced technologies that emphasize on
case/problem-based learning - Rich content, user choice, multiple learning
paths - More difficult to build
- E.g. video ethnography
13Socio-culturalist Perspectiveshttp//carbon.cuden
ver.edu/mryder/itc_data/soc_cult.html
- Lev Vygotsky described learning as being embedded
within social events and occurring as a child
interacts with people, objects, and events in the
environment - Learning internalization of existing knowledge
and tools of thought in a culture - Culture teaches
- what to think (knowledge acquisition)
- how to think (Intellectual adaptation)
14Socio-culturalist Perspectives (cont)
- Learning a social process
- Level 1 learning through interaction ?
integrated into individuals mental structure - Level 2 learning potential for cognitive
development is limited to a zone of proximal
development - Collaborative learning, discourse, modeling, and
scaffolding
15Lev Vygotsky
- Every function in the childs cultural
development appears twice first, on the social
level, and later, on the individual level first,
between people (interpsychological) and then
inside the child (intrapsychological). This
applies equally to voluntary attention, to
logical memory, and to the formation of concepts.
All the higher functions originate as actual
relationships between individuals (Vygotsky,
1978, p.57)
16Socio-culturalist Perspectives (cont)
http//www.funderstanding.com/vygotsky.cfm
- zone of proximal development
- adult support learning ? children independent
learning/doing - Problem solving responsibility shifts from adult
to child - Language
- Primary interaction adults transmit knowledge to
children - Primary tool of intellectual adaptation (internal
language)
17Socio-culturalist Perspectives (cont)
http//www.funderstanding.com/vygotsky.cfm
- Curriculum children learn through interaction ?
emphasize interaction ./. Learners learning
tasks - Instruction scaffolding (continually adjusting
the level of adult help) - Assessment assess both actual (without help) and
potential (with help) development
18Exercise lesson plan II
- What is the learning theory implied in your
lesson plan? - What are the advantages and disadvantages of this
theory in the context of your lesson? - How would be your lesson like if you apply the
other two theories?
19Instructional Features Supported By All
Perspectives
?
- Active Participation
- Practice
- Individual Differences
- Feedback
- Realistic Context (problem of inert knowledge)
- Social Interaction
20Instructional Methodshttp//edtech.tennessee.edu/
bobannon/instructional_methods.html
- Presentation
- Demonstration
- Discussion
- Drill and Practice
- Tutorial
- Cooperative Learning
- Gaming
- Simulation (e.g. http//vchemlab.chem.byu.edu/gase
s/tour.htm) - Discovery (trial error http//www.duq.edu/tome
i/ed711psy/c_bruner.htm) - Problem Solving
21Cooperative Learning http//www.sheridanc.on.ca/c
oop_learn/cooplrn.htm
- Heterogeneous groups of students working together
to achieve a common academic goal or task while
working together to learn collaboration and
social skills - Advantages active learning, social skills,
interdependence, individual accountability - Limitations student compatibility, student
dependency, time consuming, individualists,
logistic obstacles - Integration beyond division of labor
- Technology-based cooperative learning
- improvement in managing information, allocating
different individual responsibilities, presenting
and monitoring instructional materials, analyzing
learner responses, administering tests, and
scoring and providing remediation for those tests - CL pencil vs. CL computer
- http//www.stemnet.nf.ca/achafe/maj_index.html
22Assignment
- Complete your statements of beliefs of a teacher,
learner, and about technology in education? (3 to
5 points in each area) - Complete your plan for a lesson or an
instructional unit. The plan should state the
Purposes, Learning outcomes, Activities,
Technology, Strategies for ensuring learning,
Audience, Schedule, and Rationale for the plan - Answer the following questions
- What is the learning theory implied in your
lesson plan? - What are the advantages and disadvantages of this
theory in the context of your lesson? - How would be your lesson like if you apply the
other two theories?
23Media
- Carrier of information between source and
receiver - Audio, printed materials, visuals, video
- ftp//ftp.prenhall.com/pub/ect/education.q-089/Hei
nich/Flashbacks/chapter1b.pdf
24Humanismtechnology Correlations
25Dales Cone of Experiencehttp//web.utk.edu/mcca
y/apdm/selusing/selusing_d.htm
- Actual experience?observation of actual
event?observation of some media?observation of
symbols - Learners benefit from abstract instructions based
on their concrete experiences - Concrete better understanding but more time
consuming vice versa - ftp//ftp.prenhall.com/pub/ect/education.q-089/Hei
nich/Flashbacks/chapter1a.pdf
26Tans Roles of a Teacher
- A teacher for a day, a father or a mother for
a lifetime A Chinese proverb - I believe
- As a teacher, I need to establish good
relationship with my students by loving and
caring about them. Students do not care what I
teach unless they know that I care. I should
take the time to know each student (especially
those who are disruptive in the class). - I should have high expectations of my students
and believe that every student can learn and
wants to learn. Expectations need to be out of
my students reach but within their grasps. - I can always be effective in my teaching.
Effective teaching includes retrieving previously
taught materials, evaluating prerequisite skills
for new materials which are taught in smaller
chunks when giving a lot of guided practice
before setting students free to do independent
practice. - My sincere and specific praise will increase my
students self-motivation and contribute to their
work. Feedback is vital to improvement. As
stated, if students cannot recognize their
mistakes, they cannot correct it. If students
cannot see success or know that they have done it
right, they cannot celebrates or learn from it. - It is important to create a conducive learning
environment. Students respond well when I am
serious about learning and teaching.
27Tans Roles of a Learner
- Accept me as I am so I may learn what I can
become Unknown