The document discusses several learning theories that could be applied at the senior stage of secondary school, including behaviorism, cognitivism, humanism, and constructivism. It provides details on the key principles and theorists behind each approach. Specifically, it outlines behaviorism's focus on reinforcement and conditioning, cognitivism's emphasis on mental processes and scaffolding learning, humanism's view of generating one's own knowledge through interpersonal skills, and constructivism's perspective of building new knowledge from experiences.
The document discusses several learning theories that could be applied at the senior stage of secondary school, including behaviorism, cognitivism, humanism, and constructivism. It provides details on the key principles and theorists behind each approach. Specifically, it outlines behaviorism's focus on reinforcement and conditioning, cognitivism's emphasis on mental processes and scaffolding learning, humanism's view of generating one's own knowledge through interpersonal skills, and constructivism's perspective of building new knowledge from experiences.
profile training of a profile school Learning theories • Problem question After the presentation of the lecture, decide which theory is the most efficient for the senior stage of the secondary school. • Behaviorism, as a perspective in education, is based on a change in knowledge through controlled stimulus/response conditioning. The instructor must demonstrate factual knowledge, then observe, measure, and modify behavioral changes in specified direction. This type of learning is a rote memorization of facts, rules, laws, and terminology. The correct response is achieved through stimulation of senses.. This learning goal is the lowest order learning: factual knowledge, skill development, and training. • Skinner’s key point is the need of immediate reinforcement to strengthen behavior. According to Skinner, organisms learn by making changes in their environments. • Skinner was influenced by experimental Psychologist Edward Thorndike, whose Law of Effect argued that the consequences of a behavior will either strengthen or weaken that behavior. Skinner’s theory of operant conditioning emphasized the study of observable behavior, environmental conditions and the process by which environmental events and circumstance determine behavior. Operant Conditioning – the changing of a behavior by manipulating its consequences. • Miller and Dollard (1941) developed a complex and wide ranging approach to understanding the relation between learning and personality based on drives, behaviors and reinforcement. They said that in order to learn , one must “want something”, notice something, do something and get something. • According to Miller and Dollard, the connection between stimulus and response is called a habit; therefore, what we call personality is primarily made up habits, and the relations among various habits. • Cognitivism. In many cases, the cognitively oriented theories of personality were outgrowths of prior theories that were mare directly cognitive. Kurt Lewin took the Gestalt approaches, which had previously been applied chiefly to perception and problem solving, and developed it into his field theory of personality. People who are more field dependent are influenced by the surrounding context in their perception and problem solving. This sensitivity to context leads a field- dependent person to respond more holistically and intuitively, in contrast to the more analytical and abstract responses of the field- independent person. • George Kelly developed the personal construct whose fundamental postulate is that «a person‘s processes are psychologically channeled by the ways in which he anticipates events» Kelly‘s theorizing was especially focused on the domain of interpersonal relationships. Kelly proposed that we each have a unique system of constructs that we use to understand and predict behavior (both our own and that of others). Kelly’s Role Construct Repertory Test results in a set of constructs that reflects the hierarchy of dimensions that the examinee believes are important in understanding and predicting behavior. • Bandura’s social – cognitive learning theory can be seen as an application and refinement of the classical learning theory that dominated psychology for much of the twentieth century. Bandura drew attention to observational learning. In Bandura’s theory, the individual internal process of goals planning, and self – reinforcement result in the self-regulation of behavior. • The way that people interpret their environments is seen as central to their humanness, and the ways in which people differ from one another in how they do this are seen as central to their individuality. • Cognitivism, as a perspective in education, has a premise that humans generate knowledge and meaning through development of an individual’s cognitive abilities, such as the mental processes of recognize, recall, analyze, reflect, apply, create, understand, and evaluate. • The learner requires assistance to develop prior knowledge and integrate new knowledge. • The educators' role is pedagogical in that the instructor must develop conceptual knowledge by managing the content of learning activities. This theory relates to early stages of learning where the learner solves well defined problems through a series of stages. • Jean Piaget’s Cognitive Development Theory sequenced learning according to infancy [age 0-2: sensor motor], preschool [age 2-7: preoperational], childhood [age 7-11: concrete operational] and adolescence [age 11+: formal operational]. • According to Piaget, the ability to learn a concept is related to a child’s stage of intellectual development. Through a series of stages, Piaget explains the ways in which characteristics are constructed that lead to specific types of thinking. • Lev Vygotsky in his book Thought and Language, asserts that thought development in children dependents upon language development. Vygotsky’s ZPD demonstrates the need for the guidance and assistance of adults or more-skilled children. A child's unsystematic, disorganized, and spontaneous concepts are met with the more systematic, logical and rational concepts of the instructor during play. Vygotsky uses ZPD as a tool to explain the relationship between a child's learning and their cognitive development. Through the assistance of an instructor, the child is able to learn skills or aspects of a skill that go beyond the child’s actual maturational level. • Vygotsky holds that language is fundamental to a child's cognitive growth. Children are able to communicate and to learn from others through dialogue; therefore, high quality verbal scaffolding aids children's cognitive development. This focus on scaffolded early learning and sequential development of mental processes defines the Cognitivists' learning theory. Jerome Bruner believed that the goal of education is intellectual development. His theory has four components: 1) curiosity and uncertainty, 2) structure of knowledge, 3) sequencing, and 4) motivation. He recommends that instructors create learning environments that allow students to interact with their environment, connect to prior knowledge, and express the experience either verbally or mathematically. In his book, The Relevance of Education, Bruner applies his theory to infant development. • Humanism, as a perspective in education, is based on human generation of knowledge, meaning, and expertise through interpersonal intelligence. Acquisition, development, and integration of knowledge occur through strategy, personal interpretation, evaluation, reasoning, and decision-making. The learning goal is to become self-actualized with intrinsic motivation toward accomplishment. This learner is able to adapt prior knowledge to new experience. • The educator’s role in humanistic learning is to encourage and enable the learner by providing access to appropriate resources without interference. • Carl Rogers’ exploration of student-centered teaching emphasizes relationships, which is consistent with the definition of a Humanist. Person-centered significant learning, as developed by Carl Rogers, addresses the learner’s intellect, social skills, and feelings or intuitions. Roger’s writes, “Significant learning combines the logical and the intuitive, the intellect and the feelings, the concept and the experience, the idea and the meaning; when we learn in that way, we are whole.” • Abraham Maslow’s hierarchy of Human Needs (1954) sets forth the premise that the highest levels of achievement require a learner to have a foundation for learning where survival needs; safety/security needs, love/happiness needs, and self-esteem needs are realized. As with other humanists, Maslow pays close attention to the interpersonal and the intrapersonal awareness necessary to bolster individual learning abilities.[ • William Glasser’s ideas focus on personal choice, personal responsibility, and personal transformation. Glasser maintains that people need a sense of belonging, freedom, power, and fun to enable them to make good personal choices, take responsibility for their own actions, and make needed personal transformations (1996). • Glasser sets forth four categories of quality education required to fulfill higher order human needs: 1) success/worth, 2) fun/enjoyment, 3) freedom/choice, and 4) belonging/respect/love (1984). A child’s quest to satisfy these needs forms the basis for the development of their multiple intelligences and life- long learning. • Constructivism is a theory of knowledge explaining it as being developed in the human being when information comes into contact with existing knowledge that had been generated from previous experiences. It has roots in cognitive psychology and biology and an approach to education that lays emphasis on the ways knowledge is created while exploring the world. Knowledge is meaning we make from experience, transforming our world from chaos to order. Ernst von Glasersfeld describes constructivism as “a theory of knowledge with roots in philosophy, psychology, and cybernetics”. • Constructivism has implications for pedagogy or the theory of education. Discovery, hands-on, experiential, collaborative, project-based, and task-based learning are a number of applications that base teaching and learning on constructivism. References • Zhou, Molly and Brown, David, "Educational Learning Theories: 2nd Edition" (2015). Education Open Textbooks. 1. https://oer.galileo.usg.edu/education- textbooks/1 • Learning Theories: An Educational Perspective (6th Edition) 6th Edition • by Dale H. Schunk (Author)
An Introduction to the Trinity (Introduction to Religion) -- Declan Marmion, Rik van Nieuwenhove -- 2010 -- Cambridge University Press -- 9780521705226 -- ece9c61c88e555955dfa6ae89d1ec751 -- Anna’s Archive
An Introduction to the Trinity (Introduction to Religion) -- Declan Marmion, Rik van Nieuwenhove -- 2010 -- Cambridge University Press -- 9780521705226 -- ece9c61c88e555955dfa6ae89d1ec751 -- Anna’s Archive