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How People Learn

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Title: How People Learn


1
How People Learn
2
What Have We Learned So Far About How Children
Learn?
  • Children think about ideas.
  • Childrens capacity to think is, in part, a
    function of their developmental level
  • As children get older, they develop different
    cognitive structures which both help them acquire
    information and constrain what they do with this
    information
  • Children encounter new information and have to
    assimilate that information into existing
    concepts. When the information has trouble
    fitting in well with those concepts, they need to
    change the concepts to take the new information
    into account a process of accomodation.

3
More of What We Have Learned
  • Children acquire factual information
  • Their familiarity with these facts improves with
    practice. Certain types of reinforcement are
    effective ways to motivate them to learn these
    facts.
  • Some factual knowledge gets organized into
    domain specific knowledge structures.
  • Sometimes this factual knowledge must be
    reorganized into new knowledge structures. The
    reorganization of this knowledge may require
    conceptual change.
  • Sometimes, although children may not on their own
    understand a concept, they can, with the help of
    a more advanced learner grasp this concept. This
    process is called scaffolding and the childs
    ability to learn these ideas which are slightly
    above his current capability represent his zone
    of proximal development.

4
Other Things We Have Learned
  • The context in which something is learned can
    influence a childs ability to transfer that
    knowledge to another situation.
  • Sometimes a child can understand a concept and
    solve a problem in a school situation but be
    unable to solve a related problem that requires a
    concept in a context outside of school. And
    sometimes the reverse is true a child can solve
    a problem outside of school but be unable to
    solve a related problem in a school context.

5
What Can We Do With This Knowledge?
  • We are trying to understand these ideas to help
    us figure out why children sometimes have
    difficulty learning conceptually challenging
    mathematics.
  • One idea we focus on today is whether prior
    knowledge about natural numbers stands in the way
    of understanding rational numbers.

6
What Can Help You Understand This Challenge?
  • If you are a teacher of mathematics, try to think
    about an instance of one of your students who had
    difficulty understanding some conceptually
    challenging mathematical idea.
  • If you are not a teacher, think about an example
    of a child having difficulty learning one of the
    mathematical concepts described in an article we
    have read.
  • Think for example about the difficulty a child
    had in understanding ideas about decimal
    fractions.
  • Or think of the study about difficulty students
    have learning about the structure of the set of
    rational numbers.

7
Discreteness Of A Set Of Numbers
  • Natural numbers
  • what natural number(s) fall(s) between the
    following two natural numbers?

2 discrete numbers 3, and 4
1 discrete number, 3
No other discrete number
8
Density Of A Set Of Numbers
  • Rational numbers
  • what rational number(s) fall(s) between the
    following two rational numbers?

Between 2.5 and 5.5 there are an infinite number
of rational numbers
Between 2.5 and 4.5 there are an infinite number
of rational numbers
Between 2.5 and 3.5 there are an infinite number
of rational numbers
9
How does prior knowledge influence the
acquisition of new knowledge?
  • Knowing about discreteness gets in the way of
    acquiring the concept of density.

10
Vosniadou Theoretical Framework for Conceptual
Change
  • The knowledge acquisition process is not always a
    process of enriching existing conceptual
    structures. Sometimes the acquisition of new
    information requires the radical reorganization
    of what is already known.
  • Learning that requires the reorganization of
    existing knowledge structures is more difficult
    and time-consuming than learning that can be
    accomplished through enrichment. Moreover, it is
    likely that in the process of reorganization
    students will create misconceptions.
  • Many misconceptions are synthetic models that
    reveal students attempts to assimilate new
    information to their existing knowledge base.

11
Goal Of Education
  • Helping students develop the intellectual tools
    and learning strategies needed to acquire the
    knowledge that will allow them to think
    productively about mathematics

12
Is Knowing Facts Important?
  • Yes. Experts know lots of facts.
  • Distinction between usable knowledge and
    disconnected facts.
  • Experts knowledge is organized around concepts.

13
The Role Of Prior Knowledge
  • Children construct new knowledge and
    understandings based on what they already know
    and believe.
  • If you want to know why a student may be getting
    something wrong, you might want to look at her
    incomplete understandings and concepts about the
    subject being learned.
  • Sometimes you need to work on changing
    fundamental concepts of prior understandings in
    order to allow students to correctly understand
    new concepts.

14
Metacognition
  • A persons ability to monitor their understanding
    and how they are going about working at a task.

15
Transfer
  • The ability to extend what one has learned in one
    context to new contexts
  • In situated learning, we are concerned about
    transfer. Is some type of learning so bound to a
    particular context that it is difficult to
    transfer it to different contexts?
  • Question what kinds of initial learning are most
    likely to support transfer?

16
Initial Learning
  • You have to have a substantial body of initial
    knowledge in order to have knowledge to transfer
    to a new setting.
  • Learning multiplication facts may be helpful for
    learning new material.
  • Presenting multiplication facts in conceptually
    different ways may help in acquiring the needed
    body of knowledge more effectively.
  • Example Everyday Math uses fact triangles rather
    than simply asking students to memorize the
    multiplication table.
  • Developing expertise requires a lot of practice.
  • Does this suggest a role for meaningful homework
    activities?

17
The Problem Of Introducing Too Many Topics Too
Quickly
  • May hinder transfer because
  • Isolated facts are not organized into concepts
  • Not enough facts to see the relationship between
    facts that supports organizing principles

18
Contrasting Cases Can Help To Understand When,
Where, And Why To Use New Knowledge
  • Helps you notice new features
  • Helps you learn which features are relevant to a
    particular concept and which are not
  • ConceptBIPED
  • Is this a BIPED?
  • Which features?
  • (also helps to learn bi2 and pedfeet)

YES
NO
19
Motivation To Learn
  • Competence (Robert White)
  • Intrinsic as well as extrinsic
  • Performance orientation versus learning
    orientation (Carol Dweck)
  • Performance Will I make a mistake? What grade
    will I get? Will my teacher think I did well?
    What will my mother think of my work?
  • Learning this problem is a challenge. I wonder
    whether I can solve it. It will feel good to
    figure it out.
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