Title: Teaching Cognitive Learning Strategies to College Students
1Teaching Cognitive Learning Strategiesto College
Students
- Shirley L. Yu
- Department of Educational Psychology
- University of Houston
slyu_at_uh.edu 713-743-9822
2Outline
- Activity
- Some principles of information processing theory
- Defining cognitive learning strategies
- Issues in teaching college students to be
self-regulated learners - Integrated cognitive strategy instruction
3Activity
- Rate the sentences I will read according to the
scale on your handout.
4Some Principles of Information Processing Theory
5Levels of Processing
- Deeper processing focused on meaning of
information results in better recall - than does
- Shallow processing focused on superficial aspects
of information - (Craik Lockhart, 1972)
6Effortfulness in Processing
- The more difficult decisions and thinking
required during learning, the better the learning - (related sidebar) Blooms taxonomy of educational
objectives
7Blooms Taxonomy of Educational Objectives
Cognitive Domain
- Knowledge
- Comprehension
- Application
- Analysis
- Synthesis
- Evaluation
- (Bloom, Engelhart, Frost, Hill, Krathwohl, 1956)
8Blooms Taxonomy Revised (2001)
The Cognitive Process Dimension
The Knowledge Dimension
9Elaboration in Processing
- Generating more information and adding it to the
target information helps in learning - Links target information to prior knowledge
10Encoding Specificity
- When trying to recall information, cues start the
retrieval (search) process - When same cues are present
- at time of presentation (encoding) AND at time
of testing/use (retrieval), - recall is better
- (Tulving, 1983 Tulving Thomson, 1974)
11Defining Cognitive Learning Strategies
12Teaching Strategies vs.Cognitive Learning
Strategies
- Teaching strategies
- Utilized by the instructor/teacher to teach
- Cognitive learning strategies
- Utilized by the student to learn
13Cognitive Learning Strategies
- Conscious behaviors and mental activities used by
students in order to learn - (Alexander, Graham, Harris, 1998
- Weinstein Mayer, 1986)
14Rehearsal
- Repeating information over and over
- E.g., Re-read textbook
- Review lecture notes
15 Organization
- Making connections between and among information
- E.g., Make outline Create concept map
Cognitive Learning Strategies
Elaboration
Rehearsal
Organization
Mnemonics
16Elaboration
- Generating more information and adding it to the
target information - E.g., Create an example
- Restate into own words
- Relate information to own experience or
something learned previously - Use a mnemonic strategy
17Mnemonic Strategies
- Memory tricks
- E.g., Rhymes and songs
- 1st letter technique
- Keyword method
18Keyword Method
- For vocabulary foreign language etc.
- pato duck
- 1) Acoustic link
- pato sounds like pot (keyword)
- 2) Visual link
- duck sitting in a pot
19Issues in Teaching College Students to be SRL
- (Hofer, Yu, Pintrich, 1998)
20General Assumptions of a Self-Regulated Learning
Perspective
- Active construction
- Potential for control
- Use of goals/criterion/standards
- Mediates between personal and contextual
characteristics and actual achievement - (Pintrich, 2004)
21Integrated vs. Adjunct Course Design
- Adjunct course
- Stand-alone course
- Example at University of Houston
- HDFS 1311 Development of Self-regulated
Learning (Cr. 3) - Theory and research on cognitive, motivational,
and behavioral factors related to academic
success emphasis on application to students'
development.
22Learning to Learn Course
- Lectures principles, concepts, research
findings - Laboratories demonstrations, group work,
activities to enhance application and practice - (Hofer Yu, 2003 Hofer, Yu, Pintrich, 1998
- Pintrich, McKeachie, Lin, 1987
- Weinstein, Husman, Dierking, 2000)
23Advantages - Adjunct Course
- Dedicated course time
- Instructor interest, knowledge, expertise
- Improvements in
- Self-regulated learning
- Motivation
- Cognitive learning strategy use
- Metacognition
- Achievement
-
24Integrated into Course
- Strategies instruction embedded in curriculum
(metacurriculum) - Example
- HDFS 1300 Development of Contemporary Families
- A multidisciplinary integration of historical,
psychological, and sociological approaches to the
study and understanding of diversity in family
forms and influences that shape a family's
values, beliefs, and behaviors.
25Advantages - Integrated into Course
- Communicates value of strategies in context
- Provides opportunities for immediate and
authentic use - May increase probability of transfer of strategy
use
26Transfer of Learning
- Learning in one context enhances performance in
another context (Salomon Perkins, 1989) - Both integrated and adjunct courses issue of
transfer of strategies to other disciplinary
courses - (Hofer, Yu, Pintrich, 1998)
27Components and Design of Intervention
- Definition of self-regulated learner
- Components to include
- Cognitive strategies
- Metacognitive strategies
- Motivation
- Behavior
28Integrated Cognitive Strategy Instruction
29Direct Explanation Approach
- WHO?
- Teachers teach students to use cognitive learning
strategies - WHAT?
- Variety of different strategies
- WHEN?
- When to use different strategies for different
tasks/information - WHERE?
- In a variety of contexts for different subjects
- HOW?
- Model and give students practice
- WHY?
- Importance/value of using cognitive strategies
- (Pressley McCormick, 1995)
29
30State Those Objectives Specifically
- On syllabus, in class, by TAs
- E.g., Active learning
- Students will become more effective in their
learning processes
31Label and Discuss Strategies Explicitly
- Make metacognition and strategies part of
classroom discourse - Learning is not something that happens
mysteriously - (Pintrich, 2002)
32Model and Explain Strategy Use
- Demonstrate your own use of strategies and
explain why it is useful - E.g., While solving a problem, provide mental
modeling by talking aloud about your thought
process - Provide a mnemonic for hard-to-remember
information - (Duffy Roehler, 1989 Pintrich, 2002)
33Provide Opportunities for Student Practice
- Embed cognitive learning strategies as
assignments - Conveys the importance
- Encourages participation
34Organization
- Assignment example
- Write an outline for one of the textbook
chapters - Jigsaw method
- Students get in groups of 4-5
- Each student writes outline for 1 chapter
- Students distribute and review copies of their
outline to group members
35Elaboration
- Assignment example
- Generate examples of concept X
- Relate course concepts to your own experience
36Writing Strategies
- Teach procedural knowledge related to writing
papers - Break down task into smaller subgoals (and
collect for feedback) prior to due date - Peer review
- Revise, edit
37Final Thoughts
- Cognitive strategies (as part of self-regulated
learning) improve performance - College students can be taught to use strategies
- Faculty can begin this process on a small scale
and build up