Title: Theories
1Theories Philosophies
- Just the tip of the iceberg
- EDER 671
- Dr. Qing Li
2Learning Theories
- What is a theory? A theory
- provides a general explanation for observations
made over time, - Explains and predicts behavior,
- Can never be established beyond all doubt
- May be modified
- Seldom has to be thrown out completely if
thoroughly tested but sometimes a theory may be
widely accepted for a long time and later
disproved. - (Dorin, Demmin Gabel, 1990)
3Brief overview of some learning theories based
on OCSLD (2002)
- There are many different theories of learning. It
is useful to consider their application to how
your students learn and how you teach. It is
important to think how you learn and realize that
everyone does not learn the way you do.
4Sensory Stimulation theory
- Its premise is that effective learning occurs
when the senses are stimulated. - 75 knowledge held by adults is learned through
seeing, 13 through hearing. Other senses- touch,
smell taste account for 12. - By stimulating the senses, particularly the
visual sense, learning can be enhanced. - If multi-senses are stimulated, greater learning
takes place. - How through greater variety of colors, volume
levels, strong statements, facts presented
visually, use of variety of techniques and media.
5Reinforcement Theory
- Skinner positive reinforcement, negative
reinforcement, punishment. (details later) - Note much competency based training is based
on this theory. - Very useful in learning repetitive tasks, but
higher order learning is not involved. - Criticism too rigid and mechanical.
6Holistic learning theory
- Premise the individual personality consists of
many elements specifically the intellect,
emotions, the body impulse (or desire), intuition
and imagination that all require activation if
learning is to be more effective
7Facilitation theory (the humanist approach)
- Carl Rogers, Premise learning will occur by the
educator acting as a facilitator, by establishing
an atmosphere in which learners feel comfortable
to consider new ideas and are not threatened by
external factors. - Believe that human beings have a natural
eagerness to learn - There is some resistance to, and unpleasant
consequences of, giving up what is currently held
to be true - The most significant learning involves changing
ones concept of oneself.
8Facilitation theory (2)
- Teachers are
- Less protective of their constructs and beliefs
than other teachers, - More able to listen to learners, especially to
their feelings, - pay as much attention to their relationship with
learners as to the content of the course - Apt to accept feedback, both positive and
negative and to use it as constructive insight
into themselves and their behavior.
9Facilitation theory (3)
- Learners
- Are encouraged to take responsibility for their
own learning - Provide much of the input for the learning which
occurs through their insights and experiences - Are encouraged to consider that the most valuable
evaluation is self-evaluation and that learning
needs to focus on factors that contribute to
solving significant problems or achieving
significant results.
10Experiential learning
- Kolbs 4-stage learning process
- The process can begin at any of the stages and is
continuous (no limit to the of cycles). - Without reflection we would simply continue to
repeat our mistakes.
Have an experience
Review that experience
Plan next steps, experimenting to find solution
Conclude from that experience
11Experiential learning (2)
- Learning is through 1) concrete experience,2)
observation reflection, 3) abstract
conceptualization, 4) active experimentation. - People begin with their preferred style in the
experiential learning cycle. Hence 4 learning
styles activist (prefer to learn by doing),
reflector ( like to observe reflect), theorist
(like to have everything organized into a neat
schema ASAP), pragmatist (enjoys the planning
stage and keen to test things out in practice) - Dont know your learning style?
http//www.stepchange.org.uk/Learning_Style_Questi
on.pdf
12Action Learning
- Links the world of learning with the world of
action through a reflective process within
collaborative learning groups- action learning
sets. The sets meet regularly to work on
individuals real life issues with the aim of
learning with and from each other.
13Adult Learning (Andragogy)
- Knowles adult learning was special.
- adults
- Bring wealth experience to the learning
environment should be used as a resource. - expect to have a high degree of influence on what
they are to be educated for, and how they are to
be educated. - Andragogy is student-centered, experience-based,
problem-oriented and collaborative very much in
the spirit of the humanist approach to learning
and education.
14Why bother?
- Some reasons
- Learning theories permeate to all dimensions of
educational technology. E.g. depending on the
learners and situations, we design our
instructional events (environments, systems,
software) which would affect student learning. - In ID, the designer must understand the strengths
and weaknesses of each learning theory to
optimize their use in appropriate instructional
design strategy.
15Your reason?
- Can you think of at least one good reason for us
to learn all these theories? - Can you use examples from your previous
experience to explain your reasons?
16Objectivism vs. Constructivism
- Based on Wilson (1997) Roblyer (2003)
17Current educational Goals and Methods Two views
- Directed instruction grounded primarily in
behaviorism and the information-processing branch
of cognitive learning theories (acquisition
metaphor). - Constructivist instruction evolved from other
branches of thinking in cognitive learning theory
(participation metaphor).
18Philosophical foundations
- Objectivist knowledge has a separate, real
existence of its own outside the human mind.
Learning happens when this knowledge is
transmitted to people and they store it in their
minds. - Constructivist humans construct all knowledge in
their minds by participating in certain
experiences learning occurs when one constructs
both mechanisms for learning and her own unique
version of the knowledge, colored by background,
experiences, and aptitudes. - A tree was falling off in the middle of a forest
in BC and no body was around. Since nobody
heard, did the falling tree make a noise?
19Methodological differences
- Directed
- Teacher transmitter of knowledge expert source
director of skill/concept development through
structured experiences - Student receive information demonstrate
competence all students learn same material - Curriculum based on skill and knowledge
hierarchies skills taught one after the other in
set sequence.
- Constructivist
- Teacher guide and facilitator as students
construct their own knowledge collaborative
resource and assistant as students explore
topics. - Student collaborate with other develop
competence students may learn different material - Curriculum based on projects/problems, etc. that
foster both higher and lower level skills
concurrently.
20More methodological differences
- Directed
- Learning goals stated in terms of mastery
learning and behavioral competence in a scope and
sequence - Activities lecture, demonstration, discussions,
drill practice, seatwork, testing - Assessment written tests and development of
products matched to objectives all tests and
products match set criteria same measures for
all students.
- Constructivist
- Learning goals stated in terms of growth and
increased ability to work independently and
collaboratively. - Activities group projects, hands-on exploration,
authentic tasks, product development - Assessment alternative assessment including
performance assessment, portfolios quality
measured by rubrics and checklists measures may
differ among students.
21Theoretical Foundations Directed
- Behavioral theories concentrate on immediately
observable, thus, behavioral, changes in
performance (tests) as indicators of learning. - Pavlov conditioned response, behavior is
largely controlled by involuntary physical
responses to outside stimuli (e.g. dogs
salivating at the sight of dog food).
22- Behaviorist (Skinner, stimulus-response )
- behavior is more controlled by the consequences
of actions than by events preceding the action.
A consequence is an outcome (stimulus) after the
behavior influence future behaviors. (e.g. a
child reasons she will get praise if she behaves
well in school). - Since internal learning processes cannot be seen
directly, the focus is on cause-and effect
relationships that can be established by
observation. - Human behavior can be shaped by contingencies of
reinforcement - positive reinforcement increase in desired
behavior from a stimulus (study hard- praise) - Negative reinforcement -increase in desired
behavior from avoiding or removing a stimulus
(not finish assignment detention). - Punishment decrease in undesirable behavior
from undesirable consequences. (cheating failure)
23Theoretical Foundations Directed (cont.)
- Information Processing Theories behaviorisms
focus only on external directly observable
indicators of learning, information-processing
theory (first and most influential of the
cognitive-learning theories) try to visualize
what is impossible to observe directly. - Human brain has 3 kinds of memories
- sensory registers--memory that receives all the
information a person senses (1 second) - Short-term (working) memory (5-20 seconds)
- Long-term memory (indefinitely).
24Theoretical Foundations Directed (cont.)
- Information-Processing Theory Model of human
memory system
Lost
Lost
Sensory Register
Working (short term) memory
Long term memory
Input (through eyes, mouth, etc.)
attention
Rehearsal Meaningful learning Organizing Elaborati
ng Imagery
May lost if not using regularly
25More directed Gagnes Principles
- Build on behaviorism and information-processing
theories, Gagne translated principles from
learning theories into practical instructional
strategies. - Events of instruction (9) to arrange optimal
conditions of learning. - Gaining attention
- Informing the learner of the objective
- Stimulating recall of prerequisite learning
- Presenting new material
- Providing learning guidance
- Eliciting performance
- Formative assessment
- Summative assessment
- Enhancing retention and recall
26More Gagne
- Types of learning he identified types of
learning as behaviors students demonstrate after
acquiring knowledge. They differ according to
the conditions necessary to foster them. He
showed how the Events of Instruction would be
carried out slightly different from one type of
learning to another - Intellectual skills
- Problem solving
- Higher order rules
- Defined concepts
- Concrete concepts
- discriminations
- Cognitive strategies
- Verbal information
- Motor skills
- attitudes
27One more Gagne
- Learning hierarchies the development of
intellectual skills requires learning that
amounts to a building process. Lower level
skills provide a necessary foundation for higher
level ones. E.g. to learn long division, students
first have to learn all prerequisite skills
including number recognition, addition and
subtraction, etc. - Gagnes work has been widely used to develop
systematic instructional design principles (major
influence in business, industry, and military
training).
28Your task
- Working in groups of 3, try to develop a metaphor
with a graphic presentation that shows your
understanding of major characteristics of
theories and philosophies behind directed
instruction. Prepare a 2 min. presentation.
29Constructivism
- The differences among those who think of
themselves as constructivists makes it difficult
to settle on a single definition. - Theorists like Dewey, Vygotsky, Piaget, and
Bruner are credited with fundamental premises of
constructivism.
30Social constructivism
- Dewey
- curriculum should arise from student interests
- Curriculum topics should be integrated, not
isolated. - Education is growth, rather than an end in
itself. - Learning occurs through its connection with life,
rather than through participation in curriculum. - Learning should be hands on and experience based,
rather than abstract.
31Social constructivism (cont.)
- Vygotsky
- Cognitive development is directly related to and
based on social development. - Zone of proximal development difference between
two levels of cognitive functioning (adult/expert
and child/novice). - Scaffolding the assistance that an expert gives
a novice to help him/her reach higher than would
be possible by the novices efforts alone.
32Piaget Cognitive development
- Childs 4 stages of cognitive development
- Sensorimoter (birth-2 yrs.) explore world
through senses and motor activity. Cannot
differentiate between self and environment (if
they cannot see, it doesnt exist) - Preoperational (2-7) develop greater abilities
to communicate via speech and to engage in
symbolic activities (drawing object, play
pretending and imaging). - Concrete operational (7-11) increase in
abstract reasoning ability and ability to
generalize. - Formal operations (12-15) can form and test
hypotheses, organize information, reason
scientifically, show results of abstract thinking
in the form of symbolic materials.
33Piaget (cont.)
- Piagets basic assumptions
- Children are active and motivated learners
- Childrens knowledge of the world becomes more
integrated and organized over time - Children learn through the processes of
assimilation and accommodation - Cognitive development depends on interaction with
ones physical and social environment - The processes of equilibration (resolving
disequilibrium) help to develop increasingly
complex levels of thought - Cognitive development can occur only after
certain genetically controlled neurological
changes occur. - Cognitive development occurs in four
qualitatively different stages.
34Bruner Learning as discovery
- Bruner also categorized childrens cognitive
development stage - Enactive stage (0-3)
- Iconic stage (3-8)
- Symbolic stage (8-)
- Discovery learning an approach to instruction
through which students interact with their
environment by exploring and manipulating
objects, wrestling with questions and
controversies, or performing experiments. - However, teachers found that discovery learning
is most successful when student have prerequisite
knowledge and undergo some structured experiences.
35Gardner Multiple intelligences
- Of all theories embraced by constructivists,
Gardner is the only one that attempt to define
the role of intelligence in learning. - Types of intelligence Linguistic Musical
Logical-mathematical Spatial Bodily-kinesthetic
Intrapersonal Interpersonal Naturalist. - Educational implication teachers need to try to
determine which types of intelligence each
student has and direct the student to learning
activities that capitalize on these innate
abilities.
36Constructivism (claims)
- Constructivism is more a philosophy (i.e. way of
seeing the world), not a set of strategies. - The nature of reality mental representations
have real ontological status just as the world
out there does. Or, reality is more in the mind
of the knower, the knower constructs (interprets)
a reality based upon his/her apperceptions. - The nature of knowledge it is individually
constructed its inside peoples minds, not out
there.
37Constructivism (cont.)
- Human interaction we rely on shared or
negotiated meanings, better thought of as
cooperative than authoritative or manipulative in
nature. - The nature of science-it is a meaning making
activity with the biases and filters accompanying
any human activity.
38Philosophy or Rules?
- If we see the world in constructivist terms, we
go about our jobs in a different way. But this
difference cannot be reduced to a discrete set of
rules or techniques. - Too often, constructivism is equated with low
structure and permissiveness-imposing predefined
learning goals or a learning method is somehow
interfering with students construction of
meaning. This maybe true in extreme cases.
39One example
- Scott, a teacher, who holds definitely
constructivistic and anti-authoritarian
philosophy wrote in journal Third hour
composition I went to a seating chart, the first
time Ive done that here. I caught them as they
came in and told them where to sit. Great
improvement! Everyone working hard on their
papersI sense that students are relieved that
Ive imposed more structure. Imposing a seating
chart is a clear act of asserting authoritative
control and imposing structure. Is Scott
betraying his principles, or can an ostensibly
objectivist instructional technique actually
serve his constructivist learning and teaching
goals? The students answer clearly indicate that
they view it as supporting their own learning
goals.
40Creativity vs. Discipline
- Yet to help students become creative, some kind
of discipline and structure must be provided. - Creativity arises out of the tension between
spontaneity and limitations, the latter (like
river banks) forcing the spontaneity into the
various forms which are essential to the work of
art The significance of limits in art is seen
most clearly when we consider the question of
form. Form provides the essential boundaries and
structure for the creative act (Laurel, 1991,
p.101). - The point is that a given instructional strategy
takes on meaning as it is used, in a particular
context.
41Holistic way of observing
- Hence, instructional strategies that impose
structures may actually help students knowledge
construction. - One instructional strategy cannot tell whether it
hinders or serves constructivist learning goals,
rather the entire situation needs to be examined
to make the judgments.
42Constructivism (more claims)
- 2. You do not have to be a philosopher to take a
position. - 3. Basically, nobody admits to be an
objectivism. - Objectivism is primarily a pejorative label given
by constructivists to the offending others. - Realists (other name) believe there is a
reality exists, and the quality of mental
representations can be judged by their
correspondence to the reality (another hotly
debated issue).
43What is your take on?
- There are many different interpretations of
constructivism. An example a Florida
politician's position on a county option to
permit the sale of liquor - if by whiskey, you mean the water of life that
cheers mens souls, that smoothes out the
tensions of the day, that gives gentle
perspective to ones view of life, then put my
name on the list of the fervent wets. - If by whiskey, you mean the devils brew that
rends families, destroys careers and ruins ones
ability to work, then count me in the ranks of
the dries.
44Constructivism (still more claimswould it end? )
- Neither side is right. Mind is not a box that
inside the box are reflections of what lies
outside. - The starting point is recognizing that we simply
are in the world, working, acting and doing
things. Hence individual cognition is dethroned
as the center of the universe and placed back
into the context of being par of the world.
45Debate
- Prepare a debate on the benefits of using
directed vs. constructivist models for teaching
and learning. - Each group should gather evidence to support
arguments on one of the following aspects of one
of the models real, practice problems they
address the soundness of their underlying
theories the usefulness in preparing students
for future education and work. (6 groups total).
- Conduct the debate in class.
46Bibliography
- Dorin, H., Demmin, P., Gabel, D. (1990).
Chemistry The study of matter. (3rd ed.).
Englewood Cliffs, NJ Prentice Hall, Inc. - OCSLD The oxford centre for Staff and Learning
Development. http//www.brookes.ac.uk/services/ocs
d/2_learntch/theories.html 09/18/2003 - Roblyer, M., Edwards, J. (2000). Integrating
educational technology into teaching (2 ed.). New
Jersey Prentice-Hall. - Wilson, B. (1997). Reflections on constructivism
and instructional design. In C. Dills A.
Romiszowski (Eds.), Instructional development
paradigms. Englewood Cliffs, NJ Educational
Technology Publish. http//carbon.cudenver.edu/bw
ilson/construct.html 09/18/2003