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Explore the relationships and differences between cognitive science, brain science, and sociocultural theory as powerful tools for educators. Analyze problem-solving skills, enhance your own problem-solving abilities, understand the relationship between problem solving and learning, and gain empathy for learners' struggles.
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Cognitive Theory: Powerful Tools for Educators? HAL Online Mar 2, 2010
Goals for Topic 8: Understanding Children’s Thinking 1. To better understand relationships and differences among cognitive science, brain science and sociocultural theory; to be able to discuss these views in terms of tools they provide for educators. 2. To use ideas from cognitive science to analyze the problem solving of learners and to better understand and improve your own problem solving. 3. To understand and be able to discuss some important relationships between problem solving and learning. 4. To enhance your awareness of how it feels to be a naive learner; to be able to take a learner's perspective and empathize with a learner's struggle to understand.
Goals for Topic 8: Understanding Children’s Thinking • To better understand relationships and differences among cognitive science, brain science and sociocultural theory; to be able to discuss these views in terms of tools they provide for educators.
Course Perspectives • Social (Sociocultural) • Lecture, instructional method • Brain Science • Blakemore & Firth Text • Cognitive • Halpern Text
Cognitive Theory Long Term Memory Prior Knowledge: Ideas, Beliefs,Skills . . . Constructs Knowledge Cognitive Effort Working Memory Focuses Attention Senses Eyes Ears Etc. Information . . . Information . . . Information . . . Information . . .
Example Cognitive Theory: Piaget • Active prior knowledge (schemas): Interprets incoming experience • If experience consistent with known: • Assimilation • If experience challenges known: • cognitive dissonance • reflection • accommodation (old schemas change)
Cognitive Theory:What Controls Learning? • Learning Environment • Teacher, instructional design features, etc. • Other Stuff • Intelligences, habits of mind, cultural background, situational variables, opportunities to learn • Learner • Metacognitive “self-regulation” • Strategies for self-motivation, memory, etc. • Reflection
Cognitive Science Metaphors • Information Processing • Mind like computer • Active knowledge construction • Effortful meaning making • Successful learning is schematic, organized • Abstract knowledge transfers to life • Justification for most school disciplines
Misconceptions About Cognitive Science • Myth: Advocates direct Instruction (versus) active learning environments • Truth: ALL learning effortful, active; may (or may not) occur during lecture or hands-on activity
Sociocultural + Cognitive Prior Knowledge Ideas, Beliefs Skills . . . Construct Knowledge Effort After Meaning Focuses Attention Senses Eyes Ears Etc. Social Learning Environment: Discourse . . . Tasks . . . Activities . . . Illustrations. . .Learning Tools . . . Guidance . . . Norms
HAL Online • How does this course try to model a blended socio-cultural, cognitive and brain-based approach?
The Towers Problem You have two colors of stacking cubes available with which to build towers. Your task is to make as many different looking towers as is possible, each exactly four cubes high. A tower always points up, with the little knob on top. Solve the problem inductively with your group, then: • Convince yourself and others that you have found all possible towers four cubes high and that you have no duplicates. • Represent your solution to share with the class. • Devise a formula that would enable you to solve the problem for towers of 2 colors and any height (advanced: with any number of colors and any height)
After Exercise • Any member of your group should be able to: • Explain an inductive strategy for solving the 2-color/4 tall towers problem and be able to convince others the solution is correct. • Explain a general formula for the 2-color towers problem that works for towers of any height • Using your work on the towers problem, explain the relationship between deductive and inductive reasoning.
Things to consider • Expert blind spots • Inductive versus deductive reasoning • Math anxiety • Should peer mentors provide answers?