Sei sulla pagina 1di 3

Van Xavier G.

Jison BTVTEd AT 1-A Title: “Researches on Learner’s Learning”

Over the years, educators have asked questions about how people learn. In this series of articles,
the importance of learning styles has been explored from both the instructors' and students'
perspectives. In this third and final article, the correlation between a student's personality and his
preferred learning style is examined and implications explored for Christian education contexts.
According to research on learning,
Students build on prior knowledge.
Students need effective organizing schemes.
Students need to be actively participating in the learning process.
Students need frequent practice and timely and constructive feedback.
Multiple representations enhance learning for all learners.
An understanding of the way you learn - metacognition - can "improve" the process.
Unfortunately, when we become teachers we usually imitate our teachers, who were imitating
their teachers - who didn't necessarily know this. So, instead of imitating exemplary teaching
practices, we may be imitating educational practices that are not very effective.
Let's examine some of these findings more closely. How do students construct knowledge?

1&2. They build on prior knowledge, using organizing schemes.


In the book Fish is Fish, by Leo Lionni (1970), a tadpole and fish are friends. When the tadpole
becomes a frog, it leaves the pond and travels for a while. Eventually, the frog returns to the
pond and describes what he's seen to the fish: birds, cows, and people. The fish, having lived all
of its life in the pond, imagines each creature in the shape of a fish—building on its prior
knowledge.

Show credits
3. They need to be actively participating in the learning process.
Teaching science as we do science involves Inquiry Based Learning! In this cyclical process,
students' engagement with a question or topic leads to intellectual exploration. This eventually
leads to an explanation of the feature or process in question, which further leads to applications
of their ideas to that and other questions. Moreover, the process provides positive feedback; as
students' understanding grows, so does their engagement in the learning process.

This maps onto what Ken Bain (CHE, April 9, 2004 "What Makes Great Teachers Great?") calls
the "Natural Critical Learning Environment." "Natural" because what matters most is for
students to tackle questions and tasks that they naturally find of interest, make decisions, defend
their choices, etc. "Critical" because by thinking critically, students learn to reason from
evidence and to examine the quality of their reasoning, to make improvements while thinking,
and to ask probing and insightful questions.

In the interest of time we may skip the "Explore" stage in teaching - but this undermines inquiry!
In short-circuiting the learning process, we neglect having our students practice doing what we
do.

Even worse, we may focus on "Explain-Apply" at the expense of engagement and exploration.
But remember, students need to be actively engaged in the learning process in order to learn.
4. Students need frequent practice and timely feedback.
Consider the diagram of the Basic Information-Processing Model of Human Cognition (Atkinson
and Shiffrin, 1968). Information is first perceived through our senses. If it is not given any
attention, it is forgotten. If we pay attention to what our senses are telling us, the information
goes into our working memory. From here, it may still be forgotten, if we pay it no further
attention. If, however, we maintain that memory via rehearsal, it will undergo elaborative
encoding and be stored in long-term memory. Information in our long-term memory can be
either forgotten or retrieved. As instructors, we want to support the process of getting
information from sensory perception into long-term memory. We will be most effective at that if
we draw attention to "important" perceptions, and provide opportunities for rehearsal.
5. Multiple representations enhance learning for all learners, and
6. An understanding of the way you learn - metacognition - can "improve" the process.
Students in your classroom will inevitably have a variety of different learning styles. To most
effectively "reach" all of your students, you would do well to present information in multiple
different ways. In fact, even for students with a preferred learning style, seeing the information
presented in a different way reinforces it.
Learning Styles
How do students prefer to process information?
60% prefer actively, through physical activity or discussion;
40% prefer reflectively, through introspection.
What type of information do students preferentially perceive?
65% sensory: sights, sounds, physical sensations, data;
35% intuitive: memories, ideas, models, abstract.
Through which modality is sensory information most effectively perceived?
80% visual: pictures, diagrams, graphs, demonstrations, field trips;
20% verbal: sounds, written and spoken words, formulas.
How do students progress toward understanding?
60% sequentially: in a logical progression of small incremental steps;
40% globally: in large jumps, holistically.
Recapitulation
Students build on prior knowledge.
Students need effective organizing schemes.
Students need to be actively participating in the learning process.
Students need frequent practice and timely and constructive feedback.
Multiple representations enhance learning for all learners.
An understanding of the way you learn - metacognition - can "improve" the process.

References
Ambrose, S., What do we know about how students learn? Presentation to New Century Scholars
Engineering Faculty Workshop, Stanford University, July, 2002.
Barr, R.D. and Tagg, J., From teaching to learning—A new paradigm for undergraduate
education, (1995) Change, Nov./Dec., p. 13-25.
Felder, Richard M. Reaching the Second Tier - Teaching and Learning Styles in College Science
Education (1993) Journal of College Science Teaching, v. 23, p. 286-290.
Halpern, D.F. and Hakel, M.D., Applying the Science of Learning to the University and Beyond
(2003) Change, July/Aug., p.36-41.
National Research Council, Science Teaching Reconsidered: A Handbook (1997), National
Academy Press, Washington, D.C. 88p.

Potrebbero piacerti anche