Notes in CVV Final
Notes in CVV Final
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Assignments Given: Read about VICES and The Seven (7) Deadly Sins.
Aristotle is the brains behind the Virtue Ethics and Nichomachean Ethics
According to Greek Philosopher Aristotle when we talk of virtues it is the middle ground
of the 2 extremes
The middle ground is what we called virtues the one side is deficiency and on the other
side is what we called excess and both sides are called extremes
According to Aristotle the best part is the middle ground because it is called the golden
mean and it is also called balance and if it has balance it is also what we called virtue.
1. Envy (jealousy)
2. Greed (avarice/covetousness)
3. Lust (passion/desire)
4. Wrath (anger)
5. Sloth (laziness)
6. Gluttony (use of (food))
7. Pride (vanity; vainglory)
7 Capital/Deady Sins
1. Pride(vanity;vainglory)
2. Greed (avarice/covetousness
3. Lust (inordinate or illicite sexual desires)
4. Envy (jealousy)
5. Gluttony (overinduldge or overeating)
6. Wrath (anger)
7. Sloth (laziness)
Greek Philosophers
1. Socrates
2. Plato
3. Aristotle
EU-good or well
Eudaimonia is the ultimate aim or goal in life or the highest human good.
Elemets of Eudaimonia
1. Growth
2. Authenticity
3. Meaning
4. Excellence
All the things that we do should be mean toward the attainment of Eudaimonia
4 cardinal virtues
Socrates, Plato and Aristotle are the ones who thought or hypothesize how do people
learn? So that they want to seek Knowledge and Truth
They also believe that learning would come from external observation or we called
empiricism.
RATIONALIZE-reasoning out
When we talked about knowledge and truth we will talking about learning.
People behave differently because they have different learnings we are not the same
because we have our own personal and environmental experiences.
1. Knowledge
2. Skills
3. Values
4. Behaviors
5. Worldviews
6. Attitudes
1. Behaviorism
-believes that people learn thru interaction with the environment.
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Notes in Camillian Values and Virtues
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-Education has a social component wherein individual has to interact with the
environment.
2. Cognitivism
-cognition is mind
-mental processes
-this theory talks about how information is received, organized, stored and
retrieved in the mind and how they are being processed.
-the purpose is to store knowledge, memory, problem-solving, thinking, etc…
3. Constructivism
-constructing and understanding knowledge thru previous or prior learning and
experiences.
4. Humanism
-this theory talks about teaching the wholeness of the child
-self-actualization means that the fullest potential has been harnessed
-the purpose is to expose the fullest potential of a child
- 3 domains of learning
1. cognitive
2. affective
3. psychomotor
5. Connectivism
-this theory will talked about learning in the digital age.
-principles of connectivism
1. autonomy
2. connectivity
3. openness
4. diversity
BEHAVIOR OF PEOPLE
-in studying camillian values and virtues we must know what should be appropriate or
inappropriate behaviors because it reflects in the kind of upbringing, education or
breeding we manifest externally.
2. Differences in Values
-we are different in values and virtues it emphasizes on what is more important in
everyone’s life.
3. Differences in attitudes
-we are also differencing in everyone’s attitude so we must respect each other.
What major causes how come people different from one another?
Because of that the environmental factors will brings us in the learning theories.
1. Behaviorism
- S-R sequence (Stimulus-Response Sequence)
- you may act or respond by virtue of the stimulus that comes in our
experience or influences us from the manner of what we are to be.
- learning from the interaction from the environment
- the problem of this theory is it has innate or inherited factors have little influence
on how people behave.
- behaviorism are for those who are observable or quantifiable behavior.
- positive/negative reinforcement
- concept of motivation
- concept of repetition.
Assignment no. 4 Discuss the contributions of the ff. psychologist in the field of
behaviorism.
1. John B. Watson
2. BF Skinner
3. Ivan P. Pablo/pavlov
Self-image will be the totality of our values, attitudes, and judgements on how you
present yourself in the outside world and how others see you.
BEHAVIORISM
-there are 3 major prominent luminaries
-fathers of behaviorism
1. John B. Watson
-father or the founder of behavioral learning theory where he studies the concept of
conditional process.
-before behaviorism there is introspection where it only knows the mental state of an
individual. And it is not quantifiable.
-introspection will also talked about consciousness
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-Watson said that only scientific, observable, quantifiable behavior shall be considered
as a part of national science.
-from the concept of introspection it has to be go out outside we see it on observable
behavior
-Watson also says that any behavior or action is a product of an individual’s interaction
with this environment. Little Albert study is one of his study.
-Watson said the process of conditioning based on the demands on this environment or
would be the factor in shaping the behavior as well as the personality of the individual.
-the process of conditioning paved the way is making the psychology as a discipline of
natural science.
2. B.F. Skinner
3. Ivan Pavlov
-Russian physiologist
BEHAVIORISM
we are focusing on the other 2
2. Ivan P. Pavlov
-he is the one who discovered classical conditioning where he uses DOGS in his
experiment.
-classical conditioning is a type of learning that generates unconscious or
automatic response.
-this learning creates through association something between US or uncondition
stimulus with a NS or Neutral Stimulus that creates naturally occurring reflex.
-as I said earlier Ivan Pavlov uses dogs in his experiment.
-the neutral stimulus is the tone or a sound that produced.
-the unconditional stimulus is the food.
3. B.F. Skinner
-he was the proponent of what we called: operant conditioning
-operant- any active behavior upon the environment that creates
consequences.
-operant conditioning was you associate between any behavior and a
consequence.
-this learning has something to do with the employment of what we called
reinforcement or punishment and this operates with rats or lab rats.
-his experiment can also be applied in a structured or natural setting like
classrooms, (whenever a child would like to recite the teacher would always give
him a positive reinforcement).
-operant conditioning, we always associate with a certain behavior with a
consequence.
-the work of skinner was inspired by the work of Edward Thorndike and his work is
all about the law of effect
-law of effect states that whenever an action or behavior produces undesirable
outcome would not be repeated. But if he produces a desirable outcome it will
be repeated.
-skinner would always say that his believe was not to focus on introspection or
mental state and was not of the internal thoughts and motivations because it
cannot be observed and quantified.
COGNITIVISM
-cognition which means the mind, thought or mental process.
-when we talked about the processes that happen in the mind these are all
internal.
-cognitivism is the reaction of the behaviorism
-according to cognitive learning theory, even there was a response in
behaviorism it will happen because there is what we called: interference of the
internal processes of the mind.
-mind is considered information processor it is like computer.
-it receives information
-it organizes information
-it stores information; and
-it retrieves the information
-clt may involved mental processes.
Frederic Bartlett
Jean Piaget
When we talked about schema we are talking about what we called symbolic mental
contructs (abstract mental structures) or mental framework.
Object schema
-your concept about a certain object
Person schema
-you also have knowledge about the person
Self-schema
-you also know yourself
Events schema
Social schema
Schema has changes because of the experiences and the experiences will be the
stimuli
Assignment no. 6 Summarize the theory of Jean Piaget which is the theory of cognitive
development.
COGNITIVISM
before and individual response to a certain stimuli It involves also mental processes so
that he could respond will be appropriate to a particular stimulus.
COGNITIVISM discussing the work of Jean Piaget which is the Cognitive Development
Long-term changes
Do exercise no. 4A
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Jean Piaget said that cognition is developed thru the interplay of two processes.
2 processes
1. Assimilation
-adjusting new experiences to fix prior concepts.
2. Accommodation
-adjusting concept to fit new experiences.
Lev Vygotsky
-Russian Psychologist
The impact of Culture in Learning will have a very big influence in his cognitive
development.
This theory is all about places crucial importance of social process or socially-mediated
process wherein the learning of individual learns thru social interactions in his
community.
ZPD refers as a gap between what a child already knows, and what he does not know
yet.
The ZPD is the distance between the actual developmental level and potential
developmental level.
1. John Dewey
2. Jerome Bruner
3. Albert Bandura
1. John Dewey
-father of school of thought. Which he also founded known as pragmatism.
-pragmatism or instrumentalism
-pragmatism means practicality
-when we talk about pragmatism we are talking about practicality of things.
Concepts of education process or pragmatism
The best way to educate a child is to make the curriculum relevant by:
- Learning by doing (using skills)
-we are learning about practical life skills
-it is not sufficient to learn purely theories, it has to be supplemented in practice.
- Theory + practice are closely linked
- Ones experience is needed to gain knowledge
- he is also a believer of experiential education wherein the experience is needed
or it is connected with one’s ability to gain knowledge.
2. Jerome Bruner
-father of spiral approach of education/spiral curriculum
-spiral curriculum – revisiting concepts
-each time you revisit the concept there is a deepening your knowledge.
-theory of scaffolding of learning
Scaffolding of Learning
-the purpose of this theory is the student has a greater chance of using that skill or
knowledge independently.
Assignment no. 8: read and summarize the work of Albert Bandura which is the social
learning theory
Video Lecture 14
Date: March 10, 2022
Bandura is also the one who first demonstrated the Concept of Self-efficacy
CONCEPT OF SELF-EFFICACY
-we are talking about one’s belief in his own capabilities.
-Self-efficacy – each individual is bestowed with his own intelligence, physical attributes,
traits and characteristics.
-Self-efficacy – we are talking about the ability to do something and the effort that you
put in doing something.
Before human learning could occur there will be 4 processes in the observational
learning.
Observation+4 processes=learning.
4 mental processes:
1. Attention
-the subject must be interesting
2. Retention
-pertain to remembering what you have observed
3. Reproduction
-imitating what you have seen
4. Motivation
-if there is no motivation you have not exhibit the behavior that you would like to
show.
Bandura believes that learning should happen through his interaction with the
environment through a stimulus then if there’s a stimulus, the individual would be
impaled to respond to that stimulus and that is what we called the input and the
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output. Bandura elaborated by saying that, that is not the case that we have to go
directly and respond to the stimulus but there are the mediating processes or the
cognitive or mental processes.
Assignment no. 9: Explain the subsumption theory of learning by David Paul Ausubel
Schemas or Schematas
-cognitive framework
-mental structure to store & interpret information.
Relating the new material in the existing knowledge and it impacts or retained in your
long-term memory.
Inductive Learning – you put assumptions on specific first then go to general or opposite
of deductive learning.
Meaningful Learning – we talked about relating the new information to your existing
knowledge in your cognitive structure.
Proponents are:
- Jean Piaget
- John Dewey
It is now the learner who will construct knowledge by the previous knowledge through
his schema.
Concepts of Constructivism:
1. Assimilation
-is the process of taking in new information and fitting it in the existing schema.
2. Accommodation
-is a process of using the newly-acquired information to revise and re-develop an
existing schema.
3. Equilibration (Equilibrium)
-the sense of balance between your schema and that of your environment.
Assignment no. 9: Summarize in your own words and give the contributions of the ff.
psychologist.
1. Jean Piaget
2. John Dewey
1. Schema
2. Assimilation
3. Accommodation
4. cognitive equilibration
1. Action
2. Reflection
3. Construction
Cognitivism – using of intellect (mental) the primary mechanism to use is your logic and
the learner as considered as the information processor.
1. Jean Piaget
-the theory of cognitive development.
-interaction of experiences + ideas in the creation of knowledge
2. John Dewey
-he was the founder of school of thought which called pragmatism.
-he emphasize inquiry + the integration of practical activities.
-best known in learning by doing victum.
-its not only inquiring there are other ways by which you have to learn.
3. Lev Vygotsky
-known in socio-cultural theory of learning development.
-he said culture affects assimilation and accommodation of knowledge.
-known also for his ZPD or the gap between actual developmental level of the
learner and the potential developmental level of the learner.
4. Jerome Bruner
-well known for his discovering learning theory
-father of spiral curriculum
Meaningful Learning
-Is one single factor that influences learning.
-we talked about relating the new information to your existing knowledge in your
cognitive structure.
Deductive Reasoning
- Deductive reasoning is a logical approach where you progress from general ideas to
specific conclusions. It's often contrasted with inductive reasoning, where you start with
specific observations and form general conclusions. Deductive reasoning is also called
deductive logic or top-down reasoning.
Inductive Reasoning
- Inductive reasoning is a method of drawing conclusions by going from the specific to
the general. It's usually contrasted with deductive reasoning, where you go from
general information to specific conclusions. Inductive reasoning is also called inductive
logic or bottom-up reasoning.
ADVANCE ORGANIZERS
-observation cues or reminders
-to help link the new material that you would like to study to your pre-existing or
knowledge framework.
- Ausubel's idea of an "advance organizer" is to relate what a student already knows to
the new content to be learned and thus increase retention. Advance organizers should
be at a higher level of abstraction, generality, and inclusiveness than the content to be
presented.
1. Comparative Organizers
-reminders to integrate
- presented when material is relatively familiar or when new ideas will be
integrated with prior knowledge.
2. Expository Organizers
- Expository advance organizers give students a broad idea of the lesson's
purpose before the lesson begins. For example, a teacher may tell students what
the lesson's goals are: "We've talked about what habitats are and why some
animals prefer to live in different places than other animals do.
Human being
Proponents of Humanism
1. Abraham Maslow
2. Carl Rogers
3. Maria Montessori
Assignment no. 11
1. Physiological needs – are the basic needs that we as human beings need like:
food, clothing, air, shelter, and sex.
2. Security/safety needs – financial security, health and wealth care.
3. Social needs – to love, affection, and belongingness.
4. Esteem needs – refers to appreciation, and respect.
5. Self-actualization – the utilization and exploitations of an individual capabilities,
potentiality and skills.
Abraham Maslow – was an American psychologist who developed this said theory.
The theory was developed by Dr. Maslow in response to learning theory which is
behaviorism.
Maslow’s theory is a response to behaviorism and also the work of Sigmund Freud.
3. Ego – we are talking about yourself. Practical side of the human mind and we
view things based on the pragmatic side within the context of reality.
According to freud the 3 fundamental structures are always interplay on one another
resulting at times on what we called conflict.
Self-actualization – the
utilization and exploitations
of an individual
capabilities, potentiality
and skills.
The answer is this is just an aspiration and if this is an aspiration it may be achieved or
not achieved but most likely because aspiration is an ideal.
Maslow said on this hierarchy is “what a man can be, he must be.”
• According to Freud the 1st five years in the life of the child are the most critical in
developing the personality of a child.
• he discussed that life revolves around tension and pleasure.
• Tension – conflict
- is created of what we called the libido (is what we called “libog” or sexual
energy or sexual drives, sexual instincts.)
- once you do not release the libido there will be a conflict.
• Pleasure
• This theory actually mentions five (5) stages.
Erogenous Zone
- the portion or part of once body that is very sensitive to sexual simulations.
In every stage, there is a conflict. In that conflict what are we going to develop in
case of conflict according to Erickson?
A child must be nurtured with love, affection, care, warm, food and it has to be
reliable and available to him so that they will have a positive attitude about life on
earth.
Conflict – it’s either you are successful in overcoming this conflict or you are a failure.
- a test of your psychological quality.
The discussion highlighted the stages of Erickson’s theory details and stages already
on the previous VL.
She was responsible for putting up the casa deil bambini or children’s house.
1. Intellectual
2. Physical
3. Social
4. Emotional
5. Spiritual
6. Moral and others
1. Prepared Environment
- technical term in Montessori System of Education means clearly organized
system, carefully readied setting for children. It’s like a house with shelves
containing materials that will be used by the children in learning. The materials
are already organized according to the subject, and they are arranged from
right to left.
2. Montessori Materisals
- are scientifically design for practical learning (learning by doing).
3. The teacher acts as a facilitator
- acts only as a guide.
4. Mixed Age System
- there is no particular age grouping of children because they believe in the
uniqueness of human social experiences.
5. No Grade System
- the basis is actually what the children learned. Actual learning will have
something to do with response to the stimuli of learning.
6. Repetition
- repetition is the key to learning.
Humanism
The term self is a humanistic term which we mean who you really are. Sometimes
they refer this as the inner personality, or your soul.
Healthy Self-concept
All of these descriptions should be in the environment so that you have a healthy
self-concept.
2. Child experiences.
3. Evaluation by other people.
1. Self-work
- self-esteem. It is also what you think of yourself. If you think yourself is high of
course you are confident. If you think yourself as law, you are inferior or you lack
confidence.
- self-work begins in the childhood.
2. Self-image
- means who you are.
- It is also what you think of what you see is also what you manifesting to other
people.
3. Ideal self
– is what you would like to be. Your experience here is not congruent or it is not
aligned into your ideal self.
Every individual according to rogers, has one basic drive and that is the Self-
Actualization.
Fully Functionioning Person - he continues to self-actualize and the more that you
do.
Humanism
• Domains of Learning
• Taxonomy of Educational Learning Objectives
• Mastery Learning
Domains of Learning
- we have 3 domains of learning
When you educate the mind, it’s not only the mind that you need to educate
but also the hearts and body as well.
1. Cognitive Domain
- we are educating our minds.
- when we educate the mind or brain you have to be mindful of the hierarchy of
learning or the taxonomy of learning was first introduced in his study in 1956.
- according to Bloom in 1956, these are the processes that happened in the
cognitive domain.
This study was first introduced in 1956 but this taxonomy, they have some revisions
in 2005 introduced by David Krathwohl and his assistant Loren Anderson.
The cognitive domain (Bloom, 1956) involves knowledge and the development
of intellectual skills. This includes the recall or recognition of specific facts, procedural
patterns, and concepts that serve in the development of intellectual abilities and skills.
There are six major categories, which are listed in order below, starting from the simplest
behavior to the most complex. The categories can be thought of as degrees of
difficulties. That is, the first one must be mastered before the next one can take place.
In 1956, according to Bloom this are the processes that are happened in
cognitive domain and we are able to evaluate the skills.
Evaluation
Synthesis
Analysis
Application
Comprehe
nsion
Knowledge
This is the original Bloom’s Taxonomy. As we see they are all described in NOUNS.
But in 2001, David Krathwohl and Loren Anderson revised the Bloom’s Taxonomy.
Create
Evaluate
Analyze
Apply
Understand
Know
Instead of using NOUNS they revised the taxonomy of Bloom and decided to use
VERBS. Because this are more active we see how the child or the learner’s progress
depending on this action words.
This Taxonomy in the form of hierarchy meaning, you cannot proceed to the
other processes unless you have to perform first the processes before that. Meaning to
say, it will be subsumed.
When we talk about the cognitive domain, we talked about the hierarchy. In this
domain there is what we call the hierarchy and it refers the hierarchy or the levels of
learning. When we talk about the cognitive domain what we are after as the processes
or the levels of learning will be:
• Memory Word/Memorizing
• Critical Thinking
• Problem-Solving
• Creating new ideas/information
AVVIA
• Attitudes
• Values
• Virtues
• Interests
• Appreciation
We will be able to accomplish tasks or perform movements and skills because of our:
Benjamin Bloom is also well known for his concept of mastery learning. It means
you are able to acquire the competencies and skills needed in order for us to
understand the unit of activity with proficiency.
This mastery learning is usually familiar when it comes to STEM strand. It is usually
relevant to STEM subjects like physics, engineering, mathematics.
What will be our basis in saying that we are living in what we called mastery
learning? Of course, according to bloom, there should be a basis by which we will
determine the
1. Baseline data – it is where you should know what particular areas you are strong
in or not. (usually arrived at through diagnostic testing).
2. Clear learning objectives – we can say that our learning objectives are clear if
you’re subject matter or the unit you would like to impart if they are arranged
sequentially or in order according to increasing difficulty.
3. Engage your learners to educational activities – the educational activities we
pertain here is reading, problem-solving, critical thinking and etc.. the more
educational activities that you perform or your students will perform the better
because of the saying “PRACTICE MAKES PERFECT”.
4. Set minimum passing standards – it’s not only doing activities but you have to
also have your passing standard. Our minimum passing standard here in our
country is 75% but if you put it to 80 the better. You should always device a
standard and acceptable standard so that the learners or the students will be
motivated.
5. Formative testing per unit of learning/subject matter – before leaving a certain
unit or subject matter that you taught or you have known or you have been
informed or you have learned, there should be formative testing always.
Formative testing examples is summative testing. After every unit, you make a
test or a quiz that is how you form a formative testing.
6. Advancement to the next educational unit – if you have taken the chapter 1 well
the next educational unit will be chapter 2. But before you proceed to the
chapter 2 you should have mastered first the chapter 1.
7. Continued practice and study on the educational unit (s) to achieve mastery
learning - you do not stop you continue practicing and studying the educational
units until you are able to achieve mastery learning.
CONNECTIVISM
A major factor in this learning theory which is a relatively new learning theory.
This learning theory was introduced by 2 Canadians, George Siemens and Stephen
Downes.
We have 2 concepts that are popular in this theory and that is the CONCEPT OF
NODES AND LINKS. Students are considered or treated as nodes, while when we talk
about links we talked about connections.
The term NODE is now being referred to as the students. Node is an object that
maybe connected just like node in a network.
LINKS is connections. We connect with another and link is also a form of learning.
CONNECTIVISM does not only happen internally, it also happens outside the
individual. Means through connections or links with others.
NATURALISM philosophy
According to this philosophy, nature is the ultimate reality of the world. Natural
world is the real world.
- Natural word is the real world. Means there is no other world than nature itself. It
also means we disregard in the supernatural or the spiritual world and also the
concept of values.
• Nature alone consists of all the answers that can be ask in the philosophical
world. The emphasis of nature. It will answer all of your question in the world of
philosophy.
“What you see is what you get.” What you see from nature or from the
environment is what you get.
When we talk about the natural world, we talk of matter, the material world.
Anything here on earth will be considered as the ultimate reality.
REALISM NATURALISM
• Seeks to represent real life. • They are more concerned about
preciseness, exactitude and
objectivity.
• More scientific
The difference lies now in naturalism it is more scientific, while in realism it’s not
tested scientifically what will test this is in the form of naturalism.
— George Lorimer
— Joshua J. Marine
Hello guys, it will take time to read, review, and pass the exam. So, let's do
our best to pass this subject. Take care always.
-KenARQUI