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Mediational Learning: taking personal control of change

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Title: Mediational Learning: taking personal control of change


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Mediational Learning taking personal control of
change
learning and retention
learning for understanding in science and
mathematics
accelerated forgetting
proactive inhibition
physical therapy
normal forgetting
sports coaching
Teaching practices
safety
manual handling
transitioning
skill development
skill correction
training
Continuous improvement and change management in
education, industry and sport
  • Harry Lyndon, originator of
  • Old Way/New Way and Conceptual Mediation

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C M P Old Way/New Way
Teaching / learning session (15 mins.)
Conventional
Control
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Prior knowledge matters!
The single most important factor influencing
learning change is what the learner already
knows. Ascertain this and teach him/her
accordingly. David Ausubel It is well
understood that prior knowledge facilitates new
learning , however. It is not so well known that
prior knowledge actively inhibits new learning.
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When what you already know is different from the
new thing that you are trying to learn, this can
seriously interfere with, frustrate and slow
down change and improvement
  • Stroop Colour Chart Demonstration of PI
  • This simple but intriguing activity is a
    demonstration of the powerful interference effect
    caused by prior learning. Exactly what it means
    for you personally will become clearer after you
    have done the 2 short tasks and we interpret your
    scores.
  • Now, please read and follow these instructions
    carefully

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Stroop Colour Chart Demonstration of PI
  • TASK 1
  • Name the colour of the ink in which each word is
    written, from left to right, line by line, as
    quickly as you can and correct any mistakes.
  • For example, the colour of the first word is
    "pink" so you have to say "pink" instead of
    "green". The second is "red", not "brown" and so
    on. R
  • Record how many seconds it takes you to finish.
  • TASK 2
  • Read each word aloud from left to right, line by
    line, as quickly as you can and correct any
    mistakes.
  • Record how many seconds you take to finish.

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Performance on Colour Charts
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Prior knowledge can interfere with new learning
  • all learning is protected from change by the
    brains proactive inhibitory mechanism this
    preserves continuity
  • Prior knowledge interferes with the learning of
    new but conflicting ideas
  • proactive inhibition (PI) is a forward acting
    interference - old learning actively interferes
    with new learning
  • PI causes accelerated forgetting of the new way
    within minutes or hours
  • person appears to forget what they have learned
    and reverts to old ways
  • this is an involuntary and universal
    characteristic of learning
  • PI strength varies among individuals, but we
    all have it
  • PI is well documented in research
  • conventional learning strategies directly
    stimulate PI

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Executive Summary The Conceptual Mediation
Project 1995-2002 The Conceptual Mediation
Program is an application of Mediational Learning
Theory (Lyndon 2000). It is has been shown that
where students and their teachers use this
program that students learning of
counter-intuitive concepts and skills is
significantly increased compared to students
learning using conventional learning strategies.
The program works equally well for both genders
in that CMP students achieve significantly higher
HEES scores. Further beneficial outcomes of this
program are significant improvements in student
behaviour, positive attitudes toward school, time
on task, and improved self-esteem.
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  • CMP significantly improved students academic
    attainments

Figure 5. Means for CMP and non-CMP groups
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CMP worked equally well for both genders in
raising HEES scores
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CMP significantly increased the positive attitude
of boys to school in the Adelaide cohort
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CMP significantly increased student time on
taskTable1. Time on Task in CMP Classes
  • This represents time-on-task, or engaged learning
    time, and we know from a significant body of data
    the average engagement level in the average room
    is likely to be 65 to 70 per cent, and any figure
    over 80 per cent is considered excellent. (Yates
    Higgs, 1998) The impact of CMP upon time on
    task was particularly evident in the boys.


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Why did ...
  • Students at Canberra HS and WL HS have difficulty
    learning Science
  • Jason Gillespie find it so hard to change his
    bowling action?
  • Duncan Armstrong have difficulty changing his
    slow tumble turns?
  • Aluminium casting pit crew members at ALCOA,
    Geelong, consistently fail to follow SOPs when
    handling Fibrefrax?
  • James keep reversing letters and numbers in Grade
    3, despite quality teaching and parental help at
    home?
  • The gymnastics coach, despite trying to get it
    right first time, keep having to correct
    technique faults with his athletes?
  • Helicopter mustering pilots take so long to learn
    the correct rotor stall recovery technique?
  • all these people keep falling back to their old
    ways?

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How did ...
  • Students at Canberra HS and WL HS
  • improve their learning of Science
  • Jason Gillespie finally correct his bowling
    action?
  • Duncan Armstrong speed up his tumble turns?
  • Aluminium casting pit crew members at ALCOA,
    Geelong, learn to follow SOPs when handling
    Fibrefrax?
  • James stop reversing letters and numbers?
  • the gymnastics coach improve his correction of
    technique problems?
  • helicopter mustering pilots learn the correct
    rotor stall recovery technique more quickly?
  • all of these people learned to take direct
    personal control of the change process?

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Conceptual Mediation
  • Learning from experience is always subject to
    accelerated forgetting.
  • We normally control accelerated forgetting
    through practice of the new
  • When learning involves radical change we control
    accelerated forgetting through differentiation
    that is by practising the difference between the
    old and the new

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Comments made during an evaluation of Mediational
Learning by High School students indicate the
impact Mediational Learning has on learning,
self-esteem, attitude, and motivation,
  • Ive enjoyed science more because I have right
    ideas. I can remember more things.
  • I have started to understand science more and
    enjoy it.
  • The best thing about it Mediational Learning is
    that you can be perfect in Science.
  • I actually remember what I learn.
  • I now love science, and its totally my favourite
    class.
  • It has made me learn more. It is fun and not so
    boring, so, I listen.
  • It has helped me. I feel smarter and can
    remember quicker.
  • Mediational Learning has helped me lots. As I
    like science now as Im not bored!
  • Sometimes when I really concentrate I actually
    learn something.
  • I understand whats going on in class.
  • Mediational Learning is easy and fun and you
    learn.
  • Using CMP, I dont forget anything the teacher
    teaches me. Since Ive been doing it I remember
    nearly everything.
  • CMP helps me get a decent grade.
  • I like best that you never forget it and when it
    comes to the test you just breeze through it

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Recognition Memory
Effortful Recall
CM
Automatic
Understanding
Creativity
Practice 1-3 times 4-5
Recall
Accelerated Forgetting
Natural Forgetting
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The Brain is Designed to Forget!
  • Underwoods discovery of the significance of
    proactive inhibition represents one of his major
    contributions to the science of psychology.
    Because of his research, proactive inhibition was
    understood to cause the accelerated forgetting of
    conflicting new learning.
  • The term normal forgetting (Slamecka McElree,
    1983) is used to describe the relatively slower
    rate of forgetting associated with the learning
    of things that are non-conflicting, that is,
    those that are novel and those that elaborate or
    simply confirm prior experience.
  • Data showing logarithmic rates of forgetting are
    no longer typical of the rate of forgetting
    expected when the possibility of associative
    conflict is controlled.
  • In the forgetting curves drawn today we see much
    more gradual rates of forgetting particularly in
    relationship to continuous motor skills
    (Baddeley, 1990).
  • Underwood showed that subjects who learned only a
    single list of paired associates and were
    re-tested some 24 hours later showed only
    approximately a 25 per cent reduction in recall
    of the list learned. Underwood considered even
    this relatively low percentage loss of recall as
    probably an over-estimation of the actual loss
    (Underwood, 1957).
  • Though the degree of forgetting was considered to
    be relatively minor, it still represented a major
    problem for the associative interference theory.
    Underwood and his associates attempted to account
    for this rate of forgetting in ways consistent
    with the theory that all forgetting was due to
    factors of associative interference alone.
    However, despite intensive and varied research
    efforts, the results were consistently
    unfavourable
  • The data that have proven so intractable to
    interference theory must be viewed with concern
    by anyone in memory, whether his sympathies lie
    with the interference approach or some other.
    Tasks in which a variety of encoding processes
    are used in establishing the memory are not
    forgotten at different rates. Lists of high
    meaningfulness, low meaningfulness, high
    similarity, low similarity and so on, are all
    forgotten at the same rate. Further, individual
    differences in rate of forgetting are
    minimal (Underwood, 1964).
  • Do these facts mean what they appear to mean,
    namely, that a wide variety of mechanisms used in
    establishing memories, memories that must be
    encoded differently, have no consequence for
    long-term retention? Or does it mean that
    underlying all of these memories there is one,
    powerful, common constituent that is responsible
    for the observed constant rate of forgetting and
    that remains uninfluenced by particular
    manipulations suggested by extant theory? One
    cannot but conclude that the problem is of
    critical centrality and that its solution is no
    longer the sole responsibility of the
    interference theorist. (Underwood, 1972)

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Conceptual Mediation Program Old Way/New
WayDr E H LyndonThe Competitive Edge
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Why training doesnt always workWhy people dont
do what theyre supposed to do (Fournies,FF.
1991)
  • they dont know what theyre supposed to do
  • they dont know how to do it
  • they dont know why they should do it
  • they think your way wont work
  • they think their way is better
  • they think something else is more important
  • there are no positive consequences for them to do
    it
  • they think they are doing it
  • theyre punished for doing what theyre supposed
    to do
  • theyre rewarded for not doing it
  • they anticipate negative consequences for doing
    it
  • there are no negative consequences for not doing
    it
  • there are obstacles beyond their control
  • their personal limits prevent them from complying
  • they have personal problems, distractions,
    fatigue, etc
  • no one could do it

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A new way for people changing themselves
  • when person does something wrong, doesnt do what
    he/she is supposed to do, or fails to act, we
    should
  • check if their behaviour/performance/error is
    consistent or inconsistent
  • consistency means they always do it wrong in the
    same way
  • inconsistency means they always do it wrong but
    in different ways
  • if behaviour shows consistency, then
  • you are dealing with the presence, rather than
    absence, of learning
  • the person has a learned error or habit error
  • they know how to do it wrong (or to do nothing)
  • you have to respect, incorporate what they
    already know
  • prior knowledge, skills (learned errors) resist
    change
  • conventional training, re-training will not fix
    this kind of error
  • we need an alternative training method -
    Conceptual Mediation Program (CMP) and Old
    Way/New Way

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ANTA funded experimental field trial
  • 43,500 for 6 month skill development and
    correction field trial
  • 8 skill areas, 34 trainees, 12 trainers
  • skill problems targeted were
  • important for competence
  • typical
  • resistant
  • e.g., handling and cutting glass safely
  • 3 matched groups trainees
  • conventional skill correction
  • CMP skill correction
  • no correction (control group)
  • research questions - which method gives
  • faster learning, correction
  • permanent change
  • best transfer of skills

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KAAL / ALCOA workplace trial - Fibrefrax handling
  • conventional training and re-training attempts
    unsuccessful
  • a cultural problem
  • 1.5 hours with casting pit crew (8) in training
    room
  • monitoring by pit crew supervisor
  • informal feedback after 3 weeks
  • process and safety audits after 3 months

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ALCOA workplace trial - Fibrefrax handling
Crew members comments - 3 weeks after
training (interviews conducted by Training
Coordinator) After doing the program I cant
not think about how I dispose of synthetic
mineral fibres. Casting Pit Operator A We
dont get any complaints from the crew who takes
over from us. Casting Pit Operator C I went
into the training room only because I had to. I
had little interest in the program at the
beginning. But it got me interested and I left
the meeting committed to giving it a go.
Casting Pit Operator B
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ALCOA workplace trial - Fibrefrax handling
Crew members comments - 3 weeks after
training (interviews conducted by Training
Coordinator) You can tell the difference when
we take over from another shift. You have to
give the other shifts the same training to bring
them up to our level. Casting Pit Operator
C The casting pit is significantly different on
C shift in terms of the amount of synthetic
mineral fibres left in the bath pans and around
the pit itself. There is a significant and
noticeable improvement. Crew Team
Leader When can you work with my team? Team
Leader of a different area
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ALCOA workplace trial - Fibrefrax handling
Crew members comments - 3 weeks after
training (interviews conducted by Training
Coordinator) Unfortunately, the crews rotate
regularly, so only a couple of people who did the
training are actually still working in the pit
but they are influencing the people around them
who have not done the training to clean up the
SMFs properly. That says a lot about the
program. Crew Team Leader
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ALCOA workplace trial - Fibrefrax handling
Crew members comments - 3 months after
training (interviews conducted by Training
Coordinator) Im really glad I did the program.
Why dont you give it to everyone then the
problem with SMF would be well on the way to
being fixed? Casting Pit Operator B It works
with some people but not with others. After
questioning it turned out that the people it
works for are the ones who have done the
training and the ones it doesnt work for are the
ones who have not done the training. Its easy
to tell who has done the program and who has
not. Casting Pit Operator C
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ALCOA workplace trial - Fibrefrax handling
Production Supervisors evaluation of the trial
after 3 months After discussions with the
Team Leader Ive come to the conclusion that the
CMP has been very effective in changing the work
habits of those that attended the training
session for handling synthetic mineral fibres in
the casting pit. While carrying out process
and safety audits the Team Leader has been easily
able to identify those who completed the training
against those who didnt. For this reason, I
would recommend that we investigate
the possibility of expanding the use of the
program with the intent of covering a number of
safety related work habit issues that exist in
the Ingot Mill.
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Background to the method
  • Endorsed by South Australian DETE, Queensland
    DTIR
  • TAFE Queensland obtained research grant from ANTA
    for 1996-1997 successful experimental field trial
  • ALCOA/KAAL workplace trial highly successful -
    hazardous materials handling
  • G. James Glass Aluminium workplace trial
    commencing - manual handling
  • safety awareness courses for helicopter mustering
    pilots - rotor stall recovery technique in
    Robinson R22
  • sports technique correction - Jason Gillespie,
    Paul Wilson, Mark Woolnough, Duncan Armstrong,
    S.A. Sports Institute, S.A Cricket Assocn (Greg
    Chappell)
  • KAAL re-training of fork truck drivers using CMP,
    Nov 98

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C M P Old Way/New Way
Teaching / learning session (15 mins.)
Conventional
Control
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What difference would it make?(to the employee,
trainer, business, country)
  • improved safety - injury reduction and prevention
  • reduced compensation claims
  • accelerated skill development and correction with
    individuals and groups
  • no adjustment period to new technique
  • convenience of use
  • rapid change over to new procedures, new
    equipment, new techniques, new systems, new ideas
  • greater productivity
  • employee empowerment, improved motivation and
    team work
  • greater job satisfaction for employees and
    trainers
  • improved cost-effectiveness of training, enhanced
    profile of trainers

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CMP versus conventional change programs
  • Conventional Training
  • poor transfer
  • slow improvement in skills
  • variable results
  • trainer-intensive
  • adaptation period to new skill
  • fault-finding
  • employee resistance
  • high supervision, monitoring
  • old habits die hard
  • low cost-effectiveness
  • CMP Training
  • 80 transfer after 1 session
  • rapid skill development
  • consistent predictable results
  • employee empowerment
  • no adaptation period - immediate improvement
  • blameless correction
  • self-monitoring, self-correcting
  • old habits no longer die hard
  • very cost-effective

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An answer to the transfer problem
  • simple tool for acquiring, developing and
    changing skills, technique, behaviour, notions,
    attitudes, motivation
  • with training, can immediately use it anywhere,
    any time
  • no special equipment
  • user friendly
  • accelerated learning
  • 80 transfer of learning after one successful
    session
  • 90 self-monitoring and self-correcting
  • reduced supervision
  • no blame
  • no adjustment period to the new technique or
    behaviour - immediate improvement
  • works with individuals, groups and teams
  • cost effective
  • the name .. Conceptual Mediation Program (CMP)
  • and Old Way/New Way

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People dislike change
  • we try to get it right the first time
  • but we often get it wrong
  • inaccuracies, imperfections, errors or shortcuts
  • dont follow Standard Operating Practices
  • poor, unsafe work practices develop uncorrected
    established
  • re-train operator
  • fall back to old ways transfer problem
  • workplace learning problems not amenable to
    training solutions
  • employee attitude, workplace culture to blame
  • easier to alter equipment, tools, work
    environment than try to change work habits

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The employee education is all thats needed
fallacy
  • we want them to change the way they do things, so
    we educate them by
  • getting their commitment, cooperation, attention
  • explaining how they need to change
  • explaining, reinforcing the importance of doing
    it this way
  • pointing out possible consequences
  • developing their understanding
  • but they already have their own, different
    understanding
  • from previous training in different ways,
    processes, procedures
  • from self-taught attempts
  • from observation of others
  • from incorrect prior training
  • their own ways are protected from change so they
    suffer accelerated forgetting and revert to old
    ways
  • re-training is the proposed solution but is
    ineffective

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The attitude problem fallacy
  • when people consistently dont follow
    instructions its often because of accelerated
    forgetting
  • non-compliance may initially have started because
    of
  • annoyance
  • inattention
  • distractions
  • work pressures preventing compliance
  • poor training
  • but if allowed to go on uncorrected,
    non-compliance soon becomes a learned error and
    is then much harder to correct
  • old habits die hard (PI and accelerated
    forgetting)
  • attitude is no longer whats maintaining the
    behaviour - its PI maintaining the status quo
    and preserving their old ways
  • maintenance of old ways is simply a sign the
    brains preservation mechanism is doing its job
    and slowing down or blocking transfer of training
    to the job
  • its no longer simply attributable to bad
    attitude

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Change is necessary but people resist change
  • everyone has to change sooner or later because
  • they have to change - poor technique, unsafe
  • they want to change - upgrade, transition,
    improve
  • signs that people resist change
  • emotions
  • excuses for non-compliance (Fournies, 1991)
  • change occurs only slowly
  • fall back to old ways
  • need retraining
  • symptoms or indicators of underlying problems

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Why does non-compliance really happen(why dont
people change)?
  • people may be new but they are not a blank
    slate
  • even untrained persons have some knowledge, some
    ideas, some self-taught skills
  • trained persons have many skills
  • some or all of their pre-existing skills,
    knowledge may be incomplete, incorrect,
    misconceived
  • these wrong ideas and ways, having gone
    uncorrected, have been repeatedly used, practiced
  • whatever you practice you will learn - becomes
    automatic, routine, unconscious, reflex-like
    responses to situations and instructions
  • you can learn to think and do the wrong thing
    just as easily as the right thing
  • you now have a learned error or habit error
  • learned errors, like all habits, die hard
  • conventional training, teaching takes little or
    no account of prior learning (correct or
    incorrect)

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