i ntroto theory
DESCRIPTION
Introduction to learning theoryTRANSCRIPT
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Module 1: Theory of Learning for ISOM
Ph.D. StudentsDr. Aprille Black
Spring 2012
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Spring 2012 2
Overview
• Introduction – Background, assumptions, expectations
• Review of syllabus• Intro to learning theories• Learning theories and Course Design• Exercise• Q&A
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Spring 2012 3
Introduction
• Background– What brings you to this course?
• Assumptions– What are your thoughts about
learning, theory, and instruction
• Expectations– What do you want out of this course?
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Spring 2012 4
Review of syllabus
• Questions and Comments• Readings• Activities
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Spring 2012 5
Beliefs & Assumptions
• Scientific approaches to the study of learning and cognition
• No single learning theory is adequate to account for all aspects of learning
• A theory does not necessarily prescribe the best instructional methodology
• What people learn through formal instruction is only a small subset of what they know
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Course Deliverables
• Summary of Theory and Associated Theorist(s)
• Learning activities• Personal theory of learning
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Personal Learning Theory
• Focus on inputs, means, results• Take a stand on the merits and
limitations of one or more particular theories
• Determine applicability to the ISOM teaching area.
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Driscoll (2005), p.1
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Definitions
• Learning: A persisting change in performance (or performance potential) that results from experience and interaction
• Cognition: Processes by which sensory input is transformed, reduced, elaborated, stored, recovered, & used
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• Theory: Set of interrelated constructs, definitions, and propositions that present a systematic view of phenomena for the purpose of explaining, predicting, and controlling
• Learning theory: A set of constructs linking observed changes in performance with what is thought to bring about those changes
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• Theories originate with questions or counter evidence
• Motivation leads to conducting systematic observations, on the basis of which plausible answers can be constructed
• Theories don't give us "the truth of the matter," only a conceptual framework for making sense of the data collected so far
• A particular theory stems from a particular perspective; therefore, theories carry "worldviews"
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• Different paradigms approach phenomena with different assumptions and beliefs– Behaviorism: quasi-experimental, a priori– Cognitivism: quasi-experimental, emergent– Constructivism: emergent, naturalistic
• Two apparently competing theories may not even be directed at the same phenomena
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Epistemology & Theory
Driscoll (2005), p.15
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Theory Building
• Questions Addressed in the theory-building process:– What kinds of assumptions and beliefs will you bring
to the question? – What specific questions would you start with? – What sort of observations or data collection would
you use? – How would the results of your data collection help
you in the next step of building your "theory"?
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Theory Building
Driscoll (2005), p.5
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Learning Theory and Teaching
• Assumption: Effective instruction is informed by theories of learning
• Goal is to identify conditions for learning and then design instruction
• But:– Theory is descriptive– Instruction is prescriptive
• Consequently, it is difficult to convert descriptive understandings to prescriptive intentions for change…