Title: Biographies of motivation for lifelong learning Graeme Martin‚ School of Education‚ University of Birmingham‚ UK Paper presented at the British Educational Research Association Annual Conference‚ University of Glamorgan‚ 14-17 September 2005 Abstract: Research in motivation for learning (or achievement motivation) has flourished in the past 30 years. Social-cognitive theories dominate the field and have provided many insights but have been criticised for relying on a traditional methodological
Premium Self-efficacy Educational psychology Motivation
Children’s Functional Health Pattern Assessment Functional Health Pattern Assessment (FHP) Toddler Erickson’s Developmental Stage: Autonomy versus shame and doubt Preschool-Aged Erickson’s Developmental Stage: Initiative versus guilt School-Aged Erickson’s Developmental Stage: Industry Versus inferiority Pattern of Health Perception and Health Management: List two normal assessment findings that would be characteristic for each age group.
Premium Childhood Child Human development
Distance learning Distance learning has been around for a long time in the form of correspondence‚ in which assignments were completed without supervision and submitted to an instructor via mail. Most courses were quite basic and did not allow for much‚ if any‚ teacher-student or student-teacher interaction. The introduction of the Internet‚ however‚ changed this model for delivering and submitting educational content. Computers allow more complicated information‚ more engaging instructional materials
Premium Education Educational psychology Higher education
Experiential Learning The tradition of didactic learning is naturally giving way to the new era of experiential learning which allows the individual to enhance the knowledge based on real interaction (experience) with the world of knowledge. As the name suggests‚ ‘experiential’ itself is a way of experiencing the patterns of accessing knowledge‚ with emphasis on individual reflexes‚ at micro level and macro levels. However‚ it should not be confused with experiential education which deals with
Premium Education Educational psychology Knowledge
to discuss the importance of creating a desirable learning environment This essay will discuss the importance of creating a desirable learning environment and the contrast of opinions people have towards them‚ also the relationship between theory and current educational practice. So the question is “How do we learn?” For decades‚ researchers and scientists have been discussing how children come to understand the world we live in and how learning occurs. Theorists such as H.Gardner‚ Paiget‚ Vygotsky
Premium Learning styles Educational psychology Education
Principles of Learning and Teaching STUDENTS AS LEARNERS – 35% THEORISTS LEV VYGOTSKY http://facultyweb.cortland.edu/andersmd/VYG/ VYG.HTML JEROME BRUNER http://tip.psychology.org/bruner.ht ml JOHN DEWEY http://www.infed.org/thinkers/e t-dewey.htm Importance of CULTURE humans use of tools and symbols to learn – culture dictates what we learn and how • Higher and Lower mental functions – elementary (or lower) functions gradually transform to HMF through culture • Central ROLE OF LANGUAGE:
Premium Educational psychology
Reflection on my learning styles Learning styles are the different ways people learn and how they approach information. Everyone learn in their own specific way‚ although we all share some similarities in the way we learn‚ be it patterns‚ technique‚ preferences etc. One theorist called David Kolb published his learning styles in 1984. Kolb created a four stage learning style called ’The experiential learning style’. This includes: Concrete Experience (doing/having an experience)‚ Reflective Observation
Premium Learning Education Learning styles
Concepts of Learning Devonn Coleman Psychology of Learning Psych/550 John Barker June 3‚ 2013 Concepts of Learning Throughout this document there will be an examination of the concepts of learning in psychology as well as a description of the ideas of learning. This paper will recognize the differences between learning and performance in regards to psychology. Lastly‚ the conceptual approaches in learning will be evaluated for their similarities and differences. There are many different
Premium Psychology Learning
* Groups 6: The SMARTER approach to workplace learning SOCIAL LEARNING HANDBOOK: CONTENTS PAGE Workplace Learning Stages 4 & 5 At the beginning of this Handbook we identified 3 stages of workplace learning. We have now seen how social media is being used for learning – both for formal training but also‚ and more significantly for underpinning informal‚ workflow learning. This had led to two further stages of workplace learning emerging (see Fig 11). But there is a clear difference between
Premium Learning E-learning Educational psychology
To learn is to acquire knowledge or skill. Learning also may involve a change in attitude or behavior. Children learn to identify objects at an early age; teenagers may learn to improve study habits; and adults can learn to solve complex problems. Pilots and aviation maintenance technicians (AMTs) need to acquire the higher levels of knowledge and skill‚ including the ability to exercise judgment and solve problems. The challenge for the aviation instructor is to understand how people learn‚ and
Premium Learning Educational psychology Learning theory