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Robert Gagne

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Title: Robert Gagne


1
Robert Gagne
  • Conditions of Learning

2
Table Of Contents
  • Robert Gagne
  • Five Categories of Learning
  • Verbal Information
  • Intellectual Skills
  • Cognitive Strategies
  • Attitudes
  • Motor Skills
  • Quiz

3
Robert GagneLearning is something that takes
place inside a persons head - in the brain.
  • 1916-2002
  • Born in North Andover, MA
  • A.B. at Yale 1937
  • Ph.D in Psychology at Brown University
  • Connecticut College for Women, Penn State
    University, Florida State University
  • Between 1949-1958, he directed the perceptual and
    motor skills laboratory of the U.S. Air Force.
  • Conditions of Learning

4
Gagne continued
  • Although Gagnes earlier work reflected
    behaviorist thought, he is considered to be an
    experimental psychologist who is concerned with
    learning and instruction.

5
Gagne continued
  • In 1965, Gagne published The Conditions of
    Learning which outlined the relation of learning
    objectives to appropriate instructional designs.
    Gagne identified five categories of learning

6
Taxonomy of Learning Outcomes
7
Verbal Information
  • Examples
  • Stating previously learned materials such as
    facts, concepts, principals, and procedures
  • Listing the seven major symptoms of cancer

8
Verbal Information
  • Critical Learning Conditions
  • Draw attention to distinctive features by
    variations in print or speech
  • Present information so that it can be made into
    chunks
  • Provide a meaningful context for effective
    encoding of information
  • Provide cues for effective recall and
    generalization of information

9
Intellectual Skills
  • Examples
  • Distinguishing objects, features, or symbols
  • hearing different pitches played on a musical
    instrument
  • Identifying classes of concrete objects,
    features, or events
  • picking out all the green MMs from the candy
    jar
  • Classifying new examples of events or ideas by
    their definition
  • noting she sells sea shells as alliteration

10
Intellectual Skills
  • Critical Learning Conditions
  • Call attention to distinctive features
  • Stay within the limits of working memory
  • Present verbal keys to the ordering or
    combination of component skills
  • Schedule occasions for practice and spaced review
  • Use a variety of context to promote transfer
  • Stimulate the recall of previously learned
    component skills

11
Cognitive Strategies
  • Examples
  • Employing personal ways to guide learning,
    thinking, acting, and feeling
  • Devising a corporate plan to improve customer
    relations

12
Cognitive Strategies
  • Critical Learning Conditions
  • Describe or demonstrate the strategy
  • Provide a variety of occasions for practice using
    the strategy
  • Provide informative feedback as to the creativity
    or originality of the strategy or outcome

13
Attitudes
  • Examples
  • Choosing personal actions based on internal
    states of understanding and feeling
  • Deciding to exercise daily as apart of preventive
    healthcare

14
Attitudes
  • Critical Learning Conditions
  • Establish and expectancy of success associated
    with the desired attitude
  • Assure student identification with an admired
    human model
  • Arrange for communication or demonstration of
    choice of personal action
  • Give feedback for successful performance

15
Motor Skills
  • Examples
  • Executing performances involving the use of
    muscles
  • Doing a triple somersault dive off the high board

16
Motor Skills
  • Critical Learning Conditions
  • Present verbal or other guidance to cue the
    executive subroutine
  • Arrange repeated practice
  • Furnish immediate feedback as to the accuracy of
    performance
  • Encourage the use of mental practice

17
Nine Events of Instruction
18
Gain Attention
  • Description To ensure the learners are ready to
    learn and participate in activities, it is
    critical to present a stimulus to gain their
    attention.
  • For example Have a fun fact or question before
    presenting the lesson. Arouse them with
    uncertainty and surprises having to do with the
    upcoming lesson.

Did you know...
19
Inform Learner of Objectives
  • Description informing learners of the outcomes,
    or objectives, will help them understand what
    they are to learn during the lesson.
  • For example State criteria or materials that
    will be needed. Give them a rubric outlining the
    lesson, stating what you expect them to know by
    the end.

20
Stimulate Recall of Prior Learning
  • Description This helps the learners make sense
    of new information and to relate it to something
    they already know or something they have
    experienced.
  • For exampleAt the beginning of the lesson, ask
    questions about the subject to see what they
    already know.

What do you know?
21
Present Stimulus Material
  • Description Use strategies to present and cue
    lesson content to provide more effective,
    efficient instruction.
  • For example Present vocabulary words, provide
    visual aids.

Vocabulary/Visual Aids
22
Provide Learner Guidance
  • Description Advise the learner of strategies to
    aid learning and of resources available.
  • For example Remind them they can use the
    library, internet, or any materials you wish them
    to use.

23
Provide Learner Guidance continued
  • Description Activate learner processing to help
    learners internalize new skills and knowledge.
  • For example Allow activity to be creative and
    use their own ideas. Make it challenging enough
    so they have to think and use resources.

24
Provide Feedback
  • Description Provide information to the learner
    on how they performed on task.
  • For example Hold conference with student or hand
    out grade sheets.

25
Assess Performance
  • Description To test to see if the expected
    learning outcomes have been achieved.
  • For example Group discussions, quizzes, tests,
    asking them question throughout task, etc.

26
Enhance Retention and Transfer
  • Description To help learners develop expertise,
    they must internalize new knowledge.
  • For example Note taking, create their own
    examples, further research on their own,
    discovery activities, etc.

27
Quiz Time!
28
Practice Gagnes Categories
  • Using clay and a potters wheel, the student will
    create a bowl 2.5 inches high and 6 inches in
    diameter.
  • a. Attitude
  • b. Motor Skills
  • c. Intellectual Skills
  • d. Verbal Information
  • e. Cognitive Strategy

29
Answer
  • b. Motor Skills

30
  • 2. Given several examples of writing, the
    students will identify those using alliteration.
  • a. Attitude
  • b. Motor Skills
  • c. Intellectual Skills
  • d. Verbal Information
  • e. Cognitive Strategy

31
Answer
  • c. Intellectual Skills

32
  • 3. The student will be able to describe the
    process of photosynthesis.
  • a. Attitude
  • b. Motor Skills
  • c. Intellectual Skills
  • d. Verbal Information
  • e. Cognitive Strategy

33
Answer
  • d. Verbal Information

34
  • 4. The student will find algebra to be an
    enjoyable class.
  • a. Attitude
  • b. Motor Skills
  • c. Intellectual Skills
  • d. Verbal Information
  • e. Cognitive Strategy

35
Answer
  • a. Attitude

36
  • 5. Students will be able to use rhyming
    mnemonics (memory tricks) to help them remember
    specific facts in history.
  • a. Attitude
  • b. Motor Skills
  • c. Intellectual Skills
  • d. Verbal Information
  • e. Cognitive Strategy

37
Answer
  • e. Cognitive Strategies

38
  • 6. Given a free choice, students will be more
    likely to listen to classical music following
    this course than they would have been prior to
    the course.
  • a. Attitude
  • b. Motor Skills
  • c. Intellectual Skills
  • d. Verbal Information
  • e. Cognitive Strategy

39
Answer
  • a. Attitude

40
  • 7. Students will be able to name all the U.S.
    Presidents in this century.
  • a. Attitude
  • b. Motor Skills
  • c. Intellectual Skills
  • d. Verbal Information
  • e. Cognitive Strategy

41
Answer
  • d. Verbal Information

42
  • Given various rock samples, students will be able
    to correctly classify them by type.
  • a. Attitude
  • b. Motor Skills
  • c. Intellectual Skills
  • d. Verbal Information
  • e. Cognitive Strategy

43
Answer
  • c. Intellectual Skills

44
  • The students will be able to drive a manual
    transmission auto around the test track at forty
    mph with no accidents.
  • a. Attitude
  • b. Motor Skills
  • c. Intellectual Skills
  • d. Verbal Information
  • e. Cognitive Strategy

45
Answer
  • b. Motor Skills

46
  • 10. When confronted with a computer programming
    problem, the students will try working
    backwards in developing the solution.
  • a. Attitude
  • b. Motor Skills
  • c. Intellectual Skills
  • d. Verbal Information
  • e. Cognitive Strategy

47
Answer
  • e. Cognitive Strategies

48
Credits
  • http//www.my-ecoach.com/idtimeline/theory/gagne.h
    tml
  • http//tip.psychology.org/gagne/html
  • http//ide.ed.psu.edu/idde/9events.html
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