IDT 848: Class Notes for Week 2
Generative Strategies - Notes of Lecture by Dr. Gary Morrison
What is good instruction? Answer based on learning and instructional theories that form your theory and philosophy.
Mathemagenic Model (Rothkopf, 1970)
- Meaning not implicit in instruction
- Designer controls elaborations - orient, show what is relevant, transfer to LT memory
- Emphasis - controlling learning, by controlling learner
- Neo-behaviorist approach
- Learning outside of learner
- Control by expert information
- Result: shallow learning (memorization)
Generative Model Wittrock (1974):
- learner constructs meaning based upon prior learning - relating old to new the basis!
- Semantic processing (deep) versus phonemic (superficial)
- instruction activates prior learning.
- learning inside learner - meaning making by learner
- Active creation of knowledge
- Process: a) Selective processes, b) Constructive processes (note taking, paraphrasing, summarizing, generating questions, cognitive mapping, creating images)
- Sorting and retrieving from memory based on schema
- 4 key ideas 1) meaninful learning from Ausabel (relating old to new!!), 2) assimilation encoding theory (Mayer), 3) levels of processing (Craik and Lockhart), 4) schemata and scripts (guide us)
- Newman, 2001: Study comparing instructional methods to achievement
Cognitive Strategies:
- more connections, more likely to retain the material
- Working and long term memory
Cognitive Approach - CANNOT BE CONTROLLED BY DESIGNER!
- view learner as active
- attend to stimuli
- access / recall prior knowledge
- relate new to old
- encode to LT
Learning Strategies:
- What are they? See Rigney in H.F. O'Neil (1978). Learning strategies. New York: Academic Press.
- Mental operations or procedures that the student may use to acquire, retain, and retrieve different kinds of knowledge and performance.
- Jonassen - New form of educational technology 1) recall, 2) integration (with schema), 3) organizing, 4) elaboration (add information from existing).
- Two Type: 1) Detached: can be used in any class (probably used the most often) 2) Embedded not separate from the content (manipulation strategies)
- 2 Components: 1) Cognitive orienting: direct learner to activity to process content 2) cogntiive strategy: a) recall ( rehearsal, review, mnemonic), b) integration (paraphrase, metaphors, covert practice), c) organizational (analysis of key ideas and elaborate, categorization, outlining), d) elaboration (relate to what they already know (analogies, synthesis, create images)
2 Readings:
Kourilsky and Wittrock - Applied Research:
Wittrock - literative review