The Learning Process
1. Provides the conditions of effective learning 2. Seeks to meet the needs and interests of the learners 3. Helps to create conditions for openness, respect, trust, acceptance, confrontation, and self-evaluation 4. Places emphasis on the uniqueness and brights of the individual 5. Seeks feedback which will improve his effectiveness as a facilitator of the learner
As facilitator of learning:
learning is developmental
-different stages of development -native capacities, degree of maturation attained, and previous exp
learning is basic
-forming an association between stimuli and response -habit
learning is interactive
-reaction -verbal communication, perceptual discrimination, reinterpretation of old concepts, behavioral manipulation, and habit re-learning
unfreezing, problem diagnosis, goal setting, new behavior, refreezing
5 distinct phases of the learning process
1. Encourages student-faculty contact 2. Encourage cooperation among students 3. Encourage active learning 4. Give prompt feedback 5. Emphasize time on task 6. Communicate high expectations 7. Respect diverse talents and ways of learning
7 Principles of Good Practice in Undergraduate Education
Learning
an integrated, ongoing process occurring within the individual, enabling him to meet specific aims, fulfill his needs and interests and cope with the living process
communicate high expectations
challenge that hold out learners learners should be told that they are expected to work hard specific expectations should be clearly stated
developmental, interactive, basic
characteristics of learning (learning is ....)
encourage cooperation among students
collaborative learning, study groups, group project not competitively
encourage active learning
enrolling students to actively manipulate the content they are learning
emphasize time on task
ensuring that students know how much time they spend for learning take studying and practice seriously using time efficiently
goal setting
the desired changes in knowledge, skills, attitudes, and behavior are stated specifically
problem diagnosis
the forces supporting the need for change and the forces working against the changed needs are identified and presented
unfreezing
the individual becomes ready to consider changes in knowledge, skills, attitudes, and behavior
new behavior
the individual learns and practices those newer knowledge, skills, attitudes, and behaviors which are desired
refreezing
the newer learnings have been found to be beneficial and are assimilated into the individual's ongoing framework of knowledge, skills, attitudes, and behavior
linguistic, logical-mathematical, spatial, musical, bodily, kinesthetic, interpersonal, intrapersonal
types of intelligence