カテゴリー 全て - development - memory - behaviorism - language

によって Cyntia Diaz 6年前.

220

Cyntia Lyon

The text covers various psychological and educational theories, including Erikson's stages of psychosocial development, which outline crucial conflicts individuals face throughout their lives.

Cyntia Lyon

Cyntia Lyon

Behaviorism

Shaping
"Good job", "Way to go", "Perfect"
Reinforcement
Negative

Subtraction, take something away, it leaves more scars

Positive

Addition, add something

Self-Regulation

Bloom's Taxonomy

Level 4: Analysis
Level 3: Application, apply for a new situation without coaching by teacher
Level 2: Comprehension, I don't just only know, but I digested the knowledge
Level 1: Knowledge, recall

Memory Error

Reconstruction error
All the pieces are there, but it doesn't make sense because they're not in the right order
Failure to retrieve
Knowledge was on the long-term memory
Failure to store

Imaginary audience

We are putting people that don't actually exist

Language

Control Language
Give orders, be direct. "Sit down and put your paper away"
Informational Language
More indirect, give reasons

Expectation compliance

Brain

Limbic System (emotional brain)
Amygdala

Emotions such as anger, jealousy, sadness, joy. Stores and it can recall emotions from the past.

Hippocampus

Converting short term into long term memory

Lobes
Occipital lobe

Analyzing and interpreting visual images

Temporal lobe

Emotional behavior

Parietal lobe

Discerning bodily sensations

Frontal Lobe

Memory, voluntary movements

Scheme vs. Schema

Scheme is a smaller part of the schema

Teaching

Self Efficacy
Believe that you can succeed a task
Give sense of control to the student so they get motivated

Memory

Memory Distortion
Misconceptions in memory
Memory Illusion
We think something happened, but it didn't

Imagination inflation

Tendency of people who, when asked to imagine an event vividly, will sometimes begin to believe, when asked about it later, that the event actually occurred.

Prototypes

Characteristics
Correlating
Defining
How to choose it?
2. It needs to be in the child's schema
1. It must have defining characteristics

Generalizations vs. Stereotypes

Stereotypes are not ok.
Genralization is fine.
Undergeneralization
Overgeneralization

Anxiety

Types
Facilitating

perform better

Debilitating

shut down

Trait

our personality

State

situation or place or activity that causes me anxiety

Simple tasks require higher degrees of anxiety to achieve ultimate performance

Erikson 8 stages

Trust vs. Mistrust
Autonomy vs. Shame and doubt
Initiative vs. Guilt
Industry vs. Inferiority
Identity vs. Role Confusion
Intimacy vs. Isolation
Generativity vs. Stagnation
Integrity vs. Despair

Constructivism

A theory about the nature of learning that focuses on how humans make meaning from their experiences

Memory System

Long-term memory
Working memory
it focuses on what is been taught
Sensory register
all senses

Kohlberg

Preconventional
We obey because there is punishment or rewards
Conventional
norms or laws
Postconventional
social contract

Desirable interference

Studying in an accent

Attribution Theory

Types:
Controllabe/Uncontrollable

Could they have avoided it?

Stable/Unstable

Unstable: the event is not likely to happen again

Internal/External

Whose fault is it?... mine or somebody/something else?

When we succeed or fail, we come up we come up with a theory of why succeeded or failed

Personal Theory

Our explanation to an event

Learning

Negative Instance
not bad, just not related, it does not fit in
Transfer of Learning
Negative Tranfer

We bring old knowledge to new knowledge but it does not help, because it is not match

Example: Spanish Speaker learning English

Positive Transfer

We bring old knowledge to new knowledge and it does help us

Mental Models
The more we know about something, the simple principles or the basics tend to fade out and it becomes hard for us to explain in plain language.
The more we know about something, the harder it is to teach
We learn better when we do it with accents
Illusion of knowing
"We understand it once, therefore we understand it fully" FALSE!!
Experiencing by ourselves (experiment)
Re-reading does not work
Familiarity with texts is misinterpreted as mastery
Does not result in durable memory
Time consuming
Long-term memory and retaining
Go back and take a comprehensive assessments
Knowing the technique behind something first, then add more to it
Massed practice vs. Spaced pactice
Spaced Practice, Interleaved Practice and Varied Practice

Cons: requires more effort

Pros: longer retention, better mastery, improves ability to transfer learning from one situation and apply it successfully to another

Practice is spaced out, interleaved with other learning and varied

Massed practice

Cons: shorter retention

Pros: Rapid gains

Repetitive practice of one thing at a time until we've got nailed it

Strategy: Blind Spot
I know I know
I DON'T KNOW I DON'T KNOW

Pay special attention to this one

I know I don't know
Testing effect
How often?
Could create anxiety and stress
When handled appropriate, helps with retention
Repetition
Reflection
Being able to explain what we learn in our own words
Learning the content backwards and forwards
Evaluating what I learned (mirror example)