1 / 16

Adopting and adapting teaching and learning styles

Adopting and adapting teaching and learning styles. Learning. Behavioural (Skinner, Thorndike) Learning is a change in observable behaviour Change existing classroom behaviours Shape observable learning outcomes Shape new skills. Four approaches. Contiguity

truong
Download Presentation

Adopting and adapting teaching and learning styles

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Adopting and adapting teaching and learning styles

  2. Learning Behavioural (Skinner, Thorndike) • Learning is a change in observable behaviour • Change existing classroom behaviours • Shape observable learning outcomes • Shape new skills

  3. Four approaches Contiguity • Two stimuli become associated when they repeatedly occur together Classical conditioning.The pairing of an automatic response (emotional) (positive or negative) with a certain stimulus Operant conditioningThe type and timing of reinforcement affects learned behaviour. Social LearningLearning by observing other behaviours.

  4. Contiguity • Two stimuli become associated when they repeatedly occur together • Task - give examples from your subject • Matching games; battleships; missing words; bingo; concentration type games • Discourage incorrect matches. It is imperative that wrong notions are not initially given!

  5. Classical conditioning. • The pairing of an automatic response (emotional) (positive or negative) with a certain stimuluse.g. • fear, anxiety, worry - associated with ‘difficult’ concepts, examinations etc… • confidence, pride, comfort associated with ‘easy’ concepts, ‘fun’ lessons • Task - give examples from your subject

  6. Learning experiences…. • enjoyable, positive so that positive outcomes are associated with the subject. • learning tasks must be hard enough to challenge; not so hard that failure is inevitable. • use co-operative team structures to establish new ideas • minimise individual competition (tests are for progress, not competition) • use familiar and relevant case study material so that study is associated with everyday life.

  7. Operant conditioning. • The type and timing of reinforcement affects learned behaviour e.g. • an unpredictable series of reinforcement promotes persistence at a learning task • reward good ‘learning’ behaviour • reinforce new learning - apply previously learned knowledge to a local issue or make relevant by collecting current data • use unpredictable reinforcement • use plenty of praise when learning new concepts (construction of praise is important - give reasons) • Surprise tests are better than scheduled ones

  8. Social Learning • Learning by observing other behaviours.(attention; retention; reproduction; motivation) • Attention is paid to things that are interesting, exciting, enthusiastic, engaging • Use of props, newspaper clippings, stories • Reproduction: model behaviour to be reproduced (‘talking through’ difficult concepts) • Motivation - positive reinforcement - grades, marks, praise motivates

  9. Cognitive (Piaget, Voss, Wittrock) • Change in observable behaviour is a reflection of a more important internal change. • Learning is the result of one’s attempts to make sense of the world. • Learner is an active source of plans, goals, intentions, emotions which are used to sort incoming stimuli and construct meaning and knowledge, • Cognitive learning is often experiential.

  10. Experiential learning • On the job experience • Mini enterprise • Role play • Problem solvingUnderstand the problemHave enough prior knowledge to solve the problemVisually portray the problem • Encourage role taking and opinion forming • Encourage different perspectives • Encourage ownership

  11. Perception and Attention Which stimuli are attended to; which ignored? Depends on… • Rules • Knowledge • Patterns • Beliefs • Expectations Give examples from your own subject

  12. Different perceptions • Different outputs possible from the same input (different perceptions).Teachers (you) can help pupils to attend to (focus on) relevance • Provide a context: • Purpose and main ideas of the lesson • Repeat and review main ideas • State ideas in students own words • Identify important central concepts and supporting examples • Use of headings and sub headings.

  13. Arouse curiosity For each of the following, give examples from your own subject • Use surprise • Use novel ideas or approaches • Set up a puzzle or open ended issue • Raise a questions or issue before knowledge/answer

  14. Memory Information storage consists of • words, concepts, skills, strategies (verbalised) • pictures, imagination (images) • meanings, perceptions (interpretation)

  15. Networks • Networks of ideas etc. form the basis of memory; reinforced with examples, relationships and sub concepts • New ideas are integrated into existing network

  16. Retrieval Help students to retrieve prior knowledge before proceeding For each of the following, give examples from your own subject • Brainstorm existing knowledge • Hierarchical classification (what I knew, what I know now, both together) • Pupils make mental images of new ideas • Rephrase, give examples, develop graphic representations • Pupils to be active participants

More Related