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Learning Theories for Teachers

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Title: Learning Theories for Teachers


1
Learning Theories for Teachers
  • Morris L. Bigge S. Samuel Shermin
  • Chapter 10
  • How Does Learning Transfer to New Situations?

2
Introduction
  • Transfer of learning occurs when a persons
    learning in one situation influences that
    persons learning and performance in other
    situations.
  • Transfer of learning is basic to the whole notion
    of schooling.

3
How is Transfer a Problem?
  • Basic Problem In what way and to what extent
    will acquisition of skills, knowledge,
    understanding, behaviors, and attitudes in one
    subject or learning situation influence
    performance or learning in other subjects and
    situations?

4
How is Transfer a problem?
  • Other related Problems
  • How does a persons current learning assist him
    in meeting future learning situations?
  • How does what students learn in school affect
    what they learn and do outside school?
  • Does school learning have as much effect as it
    should and how can it be made more effectual?

5
How Did Generalizations Become the Key Idea in
Transfer?
  • A generalization is a statement or understanding
    of relationships
  • Generalization is another name for the relating
    of experiences in such a way that what is gained
    at one point will rebound to the advantage of the
    individual in many spheres of thought and action.
  • For transfer to occur, a student must desire to
    use the understandings or insights that one has
    acquired.

6
What Questions Are Basic to a Study of Transfer?
  • How is learning best defined?
  • What exactly does transfer of learning mean?
  • How is transfer promoted most effectively?

7
How does Mental Discipline Imply General Transfer?
  • American formal education was dominated by the
    doctrine of mental discipline.
  • The two most influential groups in the United
    states who continue to favor a disciplinary
    approach to education are some leaders in
    parochial education and liberal arts professors.

8
How do Mental Disciplinarians Define Learning?
  • The central idea in mental discipline is that
    ones mind, envisioned as a nonphysical
    substance, or its constituent faculties, lies
    dormant until it is exercised.
  • Learning is a matter of strengthening, or
    disciplining, the faculties of the mind whose
    functions combine to produce intelligent behavior.

9
How do Mental Disciplinarians Define Transfer?
  • Within the mental discipline theory, transfer is
    assumed to be automatic, once a faculty has
    developed it naturally goes into operation
    whenever its use is appropriate.
  • Within the mental discipline theory,
    psychological processes such as thinking,
    attending, remembering, and persevering become
    mental faculties such as thought attention,
    memory, and perseverance.

10
How do Mental Disciplinarians Promote Transfer?
  • Educational practice based upon mental discipline
    stresses the necessity for developing themuscles
    of the mind by rigorous exercise.
  • There is transfer of learning, but not the
    general transfer implied in mental discipline.
  • Transfer is not automatic and it is not a matter
    of disciplining minds.

11
How is Apperception Related to Transfer of
Learning?
  • Two broad types of associatinims
  • Early mentalistic associationisms, which focus
    upon the association of ideas in a mind
  • More modern physicalistic S-R associationisms,
    which are concerned with formation of connections
    either between cells in a brain and peripheral
    nervous system or between organic responses and
    environmental stimuli.

12
How do Apperceptionists Define Learning?
  • Apperception is a process of relating new ideas
    or mental states to a store of old ones.
  • Learning, then, is not a matter of developing or
    training a mind but, rather, one of formation of
    an appreceptive mass.

13
How do Apperceptionists Explicitly Define
Transfer?
  • According to Apperception theory, a students
    subconscious mind contains a quantity of mental
    states that have been accumulated during previous
    experiences.

14
How do Apperceptionists Promoter Transfer?
  • Apperceptionist promote transfer by building up
    the apperceptive masses of their students.
  • The Herbartian principles of association and
    frequency are the heart of apperception theory.
  • The association principle is that when a number
    of ideas form a mass, the combined powers of the
    mass determine the new ideas that will enter
    consciousness this is the basis of interest.

15
How do Apperceptionists Promote Transfer? Cont.,
  • The coordinate principle of frequency is that the
    more often an idea has been brought into
    consciousness, the easier it is for it to return.
  • Apperceptive teaching, in order to maximize
    transfer, continues to follow the Herbartian five
    steps- preparation, presentation, comparison,
    generalization, and application.

16
How have Connectionists Defined Learning?
  • Three major connectionistic laws of learning-
    readiness, exercise, and effect- five minor
    ones-multiple response, set, prepotency of
    elements, response by analogy, and associative
    shifting- operate whenever acquired connections
    occur.
  • In addition to the eight lows of learning,
    belongingness, impressiveness, polarity,
    indentifiability, availability, and mental system
    also have appeared as special learning concepts.

17
How Did Connectionism Emphasize Identical
Elements?
  • The identical elements theory of transfer means
    that learning is facilitated in a new situation
    to the extent that it contains identical factors
    or elements that occurred in an earlier learning
    situation.
  • Identical elements may take the form of like
    contents, procedures and facts.

18
How have Connectionists Defined Transfer of
Learning?
  • Connectionists regard human activities of all
    sorts as responses made by human organisms to
    stimuli or stimulus situations.
  • When identical elements occur in two learning
    situation, transfer from the first to the second
    is taken to be automatics.
  • What one learns basically is a group of reactive
    responses to a complex stimulus situation,
    responses are the elements tat are transferred to
    new situations.

19
How have Connectionists Promoted Transfer of
Learning
  • According to Connectionism, each person is
    limited by his inborn neural structure.
  • A persons capacity for intelligent behavior
    depends upon how many links can be formed and
    retained.
  • Schools are encouraged to decide exactly what
    students should be taught and to teach these
    directly, no through some roundabout means.

20
How Did Skinners Operant Conditioning Define
Learning?
  • Operant conditioning is the learning process
    within which a response, or operant, is both
    shaped and brought to be more probable or
    frequent through its being reinforced by a change
    in an organisms environment after the operant or
    response occurs.

21
What is Transfer in Operant Conditioning?
  • Within operant conditioning learning is simply a
    change in the form and probability of a response,
    transfer likewise is an increase probability of
    responses of a certain class occurring in the
    future.
  • There are three key concepts in understanding the
    meaning of transfer within operant conditioning
    conditioned reinforcement, stimulus and response
    induction, and conditioned generalized
    reinforcement.

22
Conditioned Reinforcement
  • In conditioned reinforcement a new stimulus
    becomes a conditioned reinforcer.
  • In education, techniques are deliberately
    designed to create appropriate conditioned
    reinforcers and thereby transfer is promoted.

23
Stimulus and Response Induction
  • Stimulus induction is a process through which a
    stimulus either acquires or loses its capacity to
    elicit a response, control a discriminative
    response, or set up an emotional state.
  • Response induction is a process through which a
    response changes its probability or rate because
    it shares properties with another response that
    has changed its probability or rate through
    reinforcement.

24
Conditioned Generalized Reinforcement?
  • Conditioned reinforcement and induction or
    generalization combine to give conditioned
    generalized reinforcement.
  • A stimulus that is a conditioned reinforcer is
    generalized when, in the process of its becoming
    a conditioned reinforcer, it is paired with more
    than one primary reinforcer.

25
How is Transfer Promoted in Operant Conditioning?
  • The teacher is the architect and builder of
    behaviors.
  • In the education of a child for future
    constructive behavior, four basic questions must
    be faced
  • What behavior is to be set up?
  • What reinforcers are at hand?
  • What responses are available in embarking upon a
    program of progressive approximation that will
    lead to the final form of the behavior?
  • How can reinforcement be most efficiently
    scheduled to maintain the behavior in strength?

26
How do Cognitive Interactionists View Transfer of
Learning?
  • Cognitive interactionists represent either a
    linear or a cognitive-field oriented
    psychological position.
  • For cognitive interactionists, thought is an
    insightful or foresightful process.
  • People interpret, not merely respond to, stimuli
  • The consequences of intelligent behavior create
    insights or expectations concerning the
    likelihood of similar outcomes in the future.

27
How do Cognitive Interactionists Define Learning?
  • Learning consists of the developing of
    self-activated, cognitive-mediated insightful
    expectations called cognitive structures,
    understandings or insights.
  • Learning, then is insightful change in knowledge,
    skills, attitudes, values, and expectations
    acquired through self-activated interactions.

28
How do Cognitive Interactionists Treat Transfer
of Learning?
  • Learning that is transferred consists of existing
    cognitive structures being extended to future
    life spaces of an individual.

29
For Cognitive Interactionists, How is transfer
Promoted Most Effectively?
  • Transfer of a generalization will not always
    occur, even when a person understands a principle
    thoroughly and has applied it often.
  • Ernest E. Bayes has stated that transfer will
    occur if and when
  • Opportunity offers
  • A trained individual sees or senses it as an
    opportunity
  • He is disposed to take advantage of the
    opportunity.

30
For Cognitive Interactionists, How is Transfer
promoted Most Effectively? Cont.,
  • Gertrude Hendrixs Methods
  • Method I. , a generalization was first stated,
    then illustrated, then applied to new problems.
  • Method II., the generalization was not stated,
    but drawn out of the learners by asking
    questions.
  • Method III., students were taught as in method II
    except that subjects were asked to state the rule
    they had discovered.

31
For Cognitive Interactionists, How is Transfer
promoted Most Effectively? Cont.,
  • Hypotheses from Gertrude Hendrixs Methods
  • For generation of transfer power, the
    unverbalized awareness method of learning a
    generalization is better than a method in which
    an authoritative statement of the generalization
    comes first
  • Verbalizing a generalization immediately after
    discovery does not increase transfer power.
  • Verbalizing a generalization immediately after
    discovery may actually decrease transfer power.

32
For Cognitive Interactionists, How is Transfer
promoted Most Effectively? Cont.,
  • Crucial Points of Cognitive-Interactionism in
    regard to transfer
  • Opportunity for transfer may occur in many
    situations.
  • Transfer is not dependent upon mental exercise
    with disciplinary school subjects.
  • Transfer is dependent upon methods of teaching
    and learning that use lifelike situations.
  • Transfer is not automatic
  • Insights need not be put into words for their
    transfer to occur
  • The amount of intraproblem insightful learning,
    not the number or trials as such, determines the
    amount of interproblem transfer.
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