Title: Learning about Learning
1- Stephen Solberg
- ssolberg_at_holderness.org
- Holderness School
2- Central Questions
- What does the field of cognitive science have to
say about how students learn? - How can we apply that knowledge and
understanding to our teaching?
3- Memory
- its a construct
- - Perception
- - Short-term memory
- Long-term memory
- that can be built to last
- - Educate about perceptions
- Understand and build on prior knowledge
- Build quality frameworks
- Encourage quality rehearsal
4- Perception
- - Making sense of sensation organizing,
identifying, recognizing, and assigning meaning
to stimuli - A construct based on previous knowledge,
beliefs, values, and attitudes - A dynamic mix bottom-up based on what we
sense and know and top-down based on what we
can infer and expect in a particular context
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11- Short-Term or Working Memory
- Brief Duration lasts only 5-20 seconds
- Limited Amount most people can only store 7
2 pieces of information in working memory - Effect of Previous Knowledge in Form of
Frameworks and Automatization previous
knowledge, frameworks, and automatization can be
used to remove need for using short-term memory
and/or expand capacity of each slot in
short-term memory
12Short-Term Memory Test - Duration
wit, sum, harm, bay, top
13Short-Term Memory Test - Duration
14Short-Term Memory Test - Duration
university, opportunity, aluminum,
constitutional, auditorium
15Short-Term Memory Test - Duration
16Short-Term Memory Test Duration (Baddeley, 1975)
wit, sum, harm, bay, top subjects can recall
4.5/5 words university, opportunity, aluminum,
constitutional, auditorium subjects can recall
2.6/5
17Short-Term Memory Test Amount (George Miller,
1956)
9754
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19Short-Term Memory Test - Amount (George Miller,
1956)
94318
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21Short-Term Memory Test - Amount
913825
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23Short-Term Memory Test - Amount (George Miller,
1956)
7958423
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25Short-Term Memory Test - Amount (George Miller,
1956)
86951372
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27Short-Term Memory Test - Amount (George Miller,
1956)
513982471
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29Short-Term Memory Test - Amount (George Miller,
1956)
9754 94318 913825 7958423 86951372 513982471
30Short-Term Memory Test Effect of Previous
Knowledge
8675309 17761812186019171941
31Short-Term Memory Test Effect of Previous
Knowledge
17761812186019161941 U.S. Wars? Jane
Who?
32Short-Term Memory Effect of Frameworks (Herbert
Smith and William Chase)
real five seconds
random five seconds
33Short-Term Memory Test Effect of Automatization
Aoccdrnig to a rscheearch at Cmabrigde Uinervtisy,
it deosnt mttaer in what oredr the ltteers in a
wrod are, the olny iprmoetnt tihng is taht the
frist and lsat ltteer be in the rghit pclae. The
rset can be a ttoal mses and you can still raed
it wouthit a porbelm. Amzanig, huh?
34Short-Term Memory Test Effect of Automatization
(Stroop Effect)
35The Matthew Effect
Unto everyone that hath shall be given, and he
shall have abundance but from him that hath not
shall be taken away even that which he hath.
(Matthew 2529)
Deficits in decoding, vocabulary, comprehension,
and prior knowledge often amplify over time.
36Write down a few critical (and positive) pieces
of previous knowledge, frameworks, and/or
automatizations you rely on your students having
daily.
37Existing knowledge, frameworks, and
automatization can also be your worst enemy.
38Write an equation using the variables S and P to
represent the following statement "There are six
times as many students as professors at a certain
university." Use "S" for the number of students
and "P" for the number of professors.
39Identify a few flawed pieces of previous
knowledge, frameworks, or automatizations you run
into with your students (or athletes).
40- Long-Term Memory Making Your Material Sticky
- Memories are encoded according to a variety of
factors, including - Characteristics of material
- Presentation of material
- Encoding and Rehearsal
- Existing and Constructed Frameworks
41- Characteristics of Material
- Meaningfulness
- Concrete/Abstract
- Imagery
42- Factors in Presentation of Material
- Serial position
- Distribution of practice
- Distinctiveness
43- Elaborative Rehearsal
- Retention of material is in direct relation to
the depth of processing, not the length of
processing - Internal/external dialogue
- Distributed practice
44- Elaborative Rehearsal
- Stein and Bransford (1979)
- Background
- Subjects asked to remember 10 sentences such as
The fat man read the sign - Conditions of the Study
- - First group just studied the sentences
- Second group generated an elaboration of their
own - Third group were presented with an imprecise
elaboration (that was two-feet tall) - Final group was given a precise elaboration
(warning about the ice) - Results
- 4.2/10
- 5.8/10
- 2.2/10
- 7.8/10
45- Frameworks
- Frameworks serve to organize knowledge, creating
a meaningful structure of related concepts - Can be mistaken in their assumptions
- Takes time to unlearn old frameworks and learn
new ones - Can be the single-most important thing you teach
46Argument Evaluation Schema - What is the authors
claim? - Is the claim supported by reasons? - Are
these reasons acceptable? - Are they connected to
the conclusion? - What is left unstated? - What
are alternative views or counterarguments?
47- Take-Aways
- Memory is constructed and we as teachers can have
a positive and long-term effect on the final
product - Learn about and think about what existing
previous knowledge, automatizations, and
frameworks are in play. Teach with these in mind,
working toward your ideal - Real learning takes real time
48Final Thought from Taylor Mali
49- Stephen Solberg
- Holderness School