カテゴリー 全て - feedback - engagement - self-efficacy - consequences

によって JonBonae Shipman 7年前.

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Social Cognitive Views of Learning

The text delves into the concept of self-efficacy and its significant role in learning and achievement. Self-efficacy, a learner's belief in their ability to perform a task, influences their engagement, choice of activities, and goal-setting.

Social Cognitive Views of Learning

Social Cognitive Views of Learning

Self-Regulation

Diversity
Students with special needs

students often have very structured and controlled lifestyles, making self-regulation difficult

Students at risk

students may have little knowledge on how to self-regulate

Some cultural groups place importance on certain qualities, those students will most likely acquire those attributes
Effortful control

aspect of temperament that is influenced by biology and brain maturation

Self-Regulated Problem Solving
Encourage brainstorming and creativity or provide general structures for students to follow
Effectively directing efforts to solve a complex problem
Self-Regulated Learning
Co-regulated Learning

Adult-child shared responsibility

Regulation of your own thinking and behaviors to learn

Self-Evaluation

Help-seeking

Self-monitoring

Use of Learning strategies

Attention Control

Self-Motivation

Planning

Goal Setting

Self-Regulated behavior
Most kindergarteners can sit quietly and listen when teacher is reading, but few squirm and occasionally poke their classmates
After: Self Evaluation and imposed contingencies
During: Emotion regulation, self monitoring and instruction
Before: self-determination/goals and standard
Setting goals and doing what needs to be done to achieve those goals

Self-Efficacy

Factors in the development of Self-efficacy
What others are saying

Negative/positive feedback

Current Emotional state
Previous Success and failures

Success and failures as a group

collective self-efficacy

Success and failure of others

coping models

Self-Efficacy affects behavior and cognition
Ultimately, learning and achievement

higher self-efficacy = higher learning and achievement because higher levels of engagement of cognitive processes

Effort and persistence
Goals
Choice of activites
Learners self-constructed judgement on their ability to do certain task or certain

Modeling

Essential Conditions for Successful Modeling
Motivation

Is the model relevant or appropriate for the students?

Learner have to be motivated to model the behavior

Motor Reproduction

A first grade won't be able to play softball like a teenager

Learners should be able to reproduce the modeled behavior

Retention

Presenting students with both a visual and verbal representation

Learners have to remember the model

Attention

Science Lab or experiment

Learners have to pay attention to the model

Characteristics of Effective Models
Relevancy to learner

Students will adopt behaviors useful to them

Prestige or Power

Local leaders or renowned athlete

Competent of the behavior/skill in question

Students will imitate something done well rather than poorly

Behaviors and Skills that Can be learned through modeling
Interpersonal Behaviors

When students are in a discussion in small groups about book and adopt each others strategies on conducting the discussion or how to solicit others opinions

Aggression

Students learn aggression through live, verbal, symbolic models in tv, music, film, and video games

Academics

Showing students how to do long division

demonstrating how to think and do a task (cognitive modeling)

Verbal
descriptions of how to execute behaviors
Symbolic model
person or character in a book or movie
Live model
actual person demonstrating behavior
When learners observe others engaging in a particular behavior and engage in the behavior themselves

The Social Cognitive View of Reinforcement and Punishment

If a consequence to a student or a student watching doesn't occur then it can have a reinforcing or punishment effect
If a student doesn't receive the expected outcome then they may or may not work as hard next time
Expectations about future consequences influence how learners process new information
If you tell a student that what they are reading won't be on the test, they will most likely not read it or read it thoroughly
Learners expectations are influenced by what happened to themselves and other people
A student participates and doesn't win the prize but watches how the other student wins the prize and participates next time by doing what he saw the other student do
Vicarious Punishment
Vicarious Reinforcement
Students form expectations about future behaviors to behave in ways that maximize desired results
A student may believe that bragging about her test will make her classmates ridicule her so she won't do it.
Incentive
Outcome expectations
Consequences influence behaviors if students are aware of response-consequence relationship
Giving a student an A and not telling them why means they wont necessarily know how to get an A the next time

Basic Assumptions of Social Cognitive Theory

Behavior becomes self-regulated
As children grow older they increasing take charge of their lives
People and the environment influence each other
Reciprocal Causation: environmental, behavioral, and personal factors influence learning and development
the choices people make about classes or extracurricular activities affect learning opportunities and consequences
Cognitive processes influence learning motivation
setting mental goals
Learning is internal
You may see someone walk out side nude but never do it yourself
People Learn from observing others
students learning how to do long division by watching someone do it first
What and how people learn when they take control of their own behavior