facilitating learning
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COGNITIVE THEORYFACILITATING HUMAN LEARNING
GESTALT PSYCHOLOGY
Game Show
Masters:
Janet BadillaMarjorie Llanes
Team A:
Jasmine AciertoMark Arao
Geraldine Cantos
Team B:
Niselyn DinglasanJearly Mendoza
Jezel Sinohin
EASY ROUND
WORD RACE
The two competing teams should be able to group or
classify the words accordingly. The team who will finish the
game first will get 30 pts.
Do you know that Cognitive Theory is influenced by Gestalt Movement and later by Swiss Psychologist: Jean Piaget and Russian Psychologist: Lev Vygotsky? American cognitive theorists such as Tolman, Bruner, and Information Processing theorist have integrated European influences yet have maintained their own distinction in cognitive theory.
Gestalt theory was developed by three psychologists: Wolfgang Kohler, Max
Wertheimer, and Kurt Koffka. According to Gestalists,
behavior can't be understood in terms of its molecular parts
because "the whole is greater than the sum of its parts." The
word gestalt is of German origin which means "pattern,"
"shape," or "form."
Jean Piaget popularized the cognitive development? Best known
for his research on children's cognitive development. He studied the intellectual development of his own three children. Piaget's theory of cognitive development described stages that children pass through in the development of intelligence and
formal thought processes. According to him, the changes in
behavior that occur during development are the results of
changes in one's ability to reason about the world around him or her.
Five laws that govern perception generated by
Gestalt Theory
•Law of Closure•Law of Similarity•Law of Proximity•Law of Pragnanz
STAGES OF COGNITIVE DEVELOPMENT
Sensorimotor stagePreoperational StageFormal Operational Stage Concrete-operational Stage
THE STM TECHNIQUES
•Repetition•Chunking•Identifying Logical patterns
THE LTM TECHNIQUES
•Association•Categorization•Mediation•Imagery•Mnemonics
BARRIERS TO EFFECTIVE MEMORY
•Repression and distortion•Retroactive inhibition•Primary and regency effects
THE SEVEN SINS OF MEMORY
•Transience•Absent-mindedness•Blocking•Misattribution•Suggestibility•Bias•Persistence
AVERAGE ROUND
NAME THAT FIGURE
The two competing teams should be able to identify the
figures presented. Each member will be given 30 seconds to answer the
question. The other team may steal if it is not answered on the given time. Each correct
answer is equivalent to 20 pts.
Do you know that information-processing approach is another important theory? There are two theoretical ideas considered fundamental to cognitive psychology and the information processing framework. The first concept is "chunking" and the capacity of short-term memory. A chunk is any meaningful unit of information. It is any digit, word, chess positions, or students' faces. The idea is that the short-term memory could only hold 5-9 chunks of information (seven plus or minus two). The second concept is about the test-operate-test-exit (TOTE). The TOTE should replace the stimulus-response as the fundamental unit of behavior. In this concept, certain goal is tested to the goal.
According to Piaget, all biological systems share specific characteristics and functions that are performed throughout the lifespan. Piaget called these functional invariants which constrain and encourage all types of development. He identified these as organization and adaptation
Figure 1. We perceive smooth continuities rather than abrupt changes.
Law of Continui
ty
Figure 2. Incomplete figures are perceived as complete
Law of Closur
e
Figure 3. Similar objects are grouped together
Law of Similarit
y
Figure 5. Extremes are virtually remembered.
Law of Pragnan
z
Figure 6. The child has the tendency to equate height with volume
CONSERVATION
DIFFICULT ROUND
WORD POWER
The two competing teams should be able to arrange the jumbled words accordingly. The jumbled
words will be shown on the screen. Answers will be written
on the board. The first team who will finish the game will get 50
pts.
Do you know that there are strategies offered to help students retrieve and remember information?•Whole and part learning. The whole and part learning accounts for introducing the material as a whole unit.•Repetition and drills. We often use relevant materials for practice, repetition, and drills.•Overlearning and automaticity. Once the material or information is repeated with a purpose, it can lead to automaticity.•Distributed practice. We need to learn things little by little and those that come in chunks. Practice can be done into relatively long and uninterrupted periods called massed practice. On the other hand, it can be spread over time which is known as distributed price.
First Set:
Arrange the jumbled words based on the given description.
N E O Q I U T L A I R B IThis is responsible for reducing cognitive conflicts in order to create a balanced cognitive state. This is made possible through the complementary processes of assimilation and
accommodation.
Equilibration
E S M C E H
The knowledge structure responsible for our ability to
reason and adapt to the environment.
SCHEME
N A O D I A T P A T
It refers to our attempt to create an accurate view of the world around
us. It means adjustment to the demands of the environment which
occurs in two basic and complementary processes:
assimilation and accommodation
ADAPTATION
S A O N I S T I A M L I
This is the process of fitting new information into existing
schemes.
ASSIMILATION
T A O C I C N O A M D M O
This is a process of modifying our schemes in order to interact with the world
around us.
ACCOMMODATION
M U S T I R L S A C R T U
In the field of life, there exist “totalities” (structures)
distinct from their parts and improving on their own
organization
STRUCTURALISM
Second Set:
Choose from the lists below to identify the words being described.
Choose from the lists below to identify the words being described.
Deferred imitationLong-term Memory System (LTM)genetic epistemologyShort-term Memory System (STM) Knowledge of objectshorizontal decalageKnowledge of causationCentrationKnowledge of spaceEgocentricityKnowledge of timeMental imagery