Human Growth &development
Human Growth &development
Human Growth &development
; generally
cannot apply the logic to problems that are
primarily verbal and hypothetical
(11-16 years)
According to , you
cannot really teach anyone anything.
Students must construct understanding
and knowledge in their own minds.
However, that process is facilitated by
collaboration and teacher guidance.
The
can serve as a guide
for curricular and lesson planning.
Children do not simply know
something or not know it. They
may arrive at a particular learning
experience without knowing
something but be ready to master
the task if they have appropriate
support.
School learning should occur in a
– It is an in
which the teacher adjusts to the child’s
level of development the amount and
type of support he or she offers the
child.
Thought and Language Connection
A phase in the
development of thought and
phase in the development of
speech can be observed. Vygotsky cited in a
study of Koehler and Buehler to give an
example of the preintellectual development
of speech. Koehler and Buehler referred to a
child’s babbling, crying and first words as the
because they are related
to the development of speech and are
unrelated to the development of thinking.
Before two years of age, the
development of thought and speech are
separate. They melt and join at two years
to initiate a new form. Thought
becomes verbal, and speech becomes
rational. Speech serves the intellect as
thoughts are spoken. Social
environment is important to children’s
development because it can accelerate or
decelerate development. ( )
Language Development
is a tool for organizing
thinking because it bears the concepts
(Moll 1990).
According to Vygotsky’s research, speech
develops first with external,
, then
, and finally,
egocentric
social speech speech inner speech
Language plays an important role in
Vygotskian theory. As children begin to use
social speech, egocentric speech and inner
speech, they learn to communicate and to
and
Chomsky’s Psycholinguistics Biological
Predisposition to Language
is a field
of study that combines
psychology and linguistics to
study how people process
language and how language
use is related to mental
processes.
The American linguist
believes that the ability to produce an endless
variety of sentences cannot be explained by
any theory involving learning by experience
and observation. He holds that such an ability
relies on
.
Chomsky observes that the complexity
of children’s early language, and the
speed with which this complexity
increases, were beyond anything that
could be explained by their experience of
language use of adults around them.
This led him to postulate the
a
structure in the brain (yet undiscovered)
that has an
Language Acquisition Device
(the ability to
understand and manipulate with verbal and
mathematical symbols)
(the ability to
understand and manipulate with objects)
(the ability to
understand and relate to people)
- Russel, 1992
defined social intelligence
as “the ability to understand and manage
men and women, boys and girls –
is a type of
social intelligence that involves the
ability to monitor one’s own and other’s
emotions, to discriminate among them,
and to use the information to guide
one’s thinking and actions.
According to , emotional
intelligence subsumes
, and involves
abilities that may be categorized into five
domains:
Managing emotions
Empathy
– observing oneself
and recognizing a feeling as it happens
– handling
feelings so that they are appropriate;
realizing what is behind a feeling; finding
ways to handle fears and anxieties, anger
and sadness.
– channeling
emotions in the service of a goal;
emotional self-control; delaying
gratification and stifling impulses.
– sensitivity to other’s
feelings and concerns and taking their
perspective; appreciating the
differences in how people feel about
things.
– managing emotions in
others; social competence and social
skills.
by Daniel Goleman
Mood Management
Impulse
The ability to
recognize a feeling as it happen is the
keystone of emotional intelligence.
People with greater certainty about their
emotions are better pilots of their lives
Bad and good
moods spice life and build character. The
key is balance.
Positive motivation
– the marshaling of feelings of
enthusiasm, zeal and confidence – is the
paramount for achievement.
The essence of
emotional self-regulation is the ability
to delay impulse in the service of a
goal.
also called
holds that learning is
what changes behavior and thus causes
development.
– exclusively of simple
reflexes –
did not limit
himself to the association between stimulus
and response. He put more emphasis on the
response of the organism. He further
believed that all learning is explained by
bonds or connections that are formed
between the stimulus and the response.
These connections are mainly through trial
and error; this theory was therefore called
, which means
Law of Readiness
Law of Effect
This law states that if the learner is
prepared to act, to make him act is
satisfying; not to make him act is
annoying. Thorndike states that
readiness is a very important
condition in learning, because a
learner may be satisfied or frustrated
depending on his state of readiness.
This law states that exercise, practice,
or repetition strengthens the bonds or
connections between the stimulus and
the response. For a connection to be
fixed, it must be used or repeated
frequently. On the other hand, the
non-use of the bond will weaken the
connection.
Thorndike’s greatest contribution to the
psychology of learning is the law of
effect. When an organism’s organism
response is accompanied or followed by
a satisfactory state, the strength of the
connection is increased. When an
annoying state accompanies or follows
the response, the strength of the
connection is decreased.
Set or Attitude
Response by Analogy
Multiple response, or varied action, was for
Thorndike, the first step in all learning. It
refers to the fact that if our first response does
not solve the problem, we try other responses.
. The
context of an image plays a key role.
(1880-1943),
German psychologist, was considered as
the
. His interpretation of the
“apparent movement” phenomenon,
presented in a paper in 1912, gave rise to
the influential school of Gestalt
psychology. With
and , Wertheimer
formulated Gestalt principles and applied
them to thinking and problem solving.
In a normal individual,
means the self-
understanding and awareness of one’s
major motivations, desires, feelings and
the like.
(1860-1959)
described his theory of learning as
. He viewed
learning primarily as a cognitive process,
a matter of acquiring beliefs and
knowledge about the environment and
then demonstrating that knowledge by
acting in purposeful, goal directed ways.
Assuming for the moment that you
are learning something, the knowledge you
have just acquired represents a kind of
, hidden from the view
of an external observer. At some future
time, however, your present learning may
become manifest, open to the view of an
external observer.
is the leading researcher
and theorist in the area of observational
learning.
also called social
learning theory occurs when an observer’s
behavior changes after viewing the behavior of
a model. An observer’s behavior can be
affected by the positive or negative
consequences called the vicarious
reinforcement or vicarious punishment of a
model’s behavior.
Attention
Production
state that
concepts are the ideas that we think with.
Expressed more technically, concepts are our
internal, mental representations of the
properties of objects and event; those objects
or events that embody a concept or event are
said to form a conceptual category.
includes among
other things, knowing how, as opposed to
knowing that as in acquiring a skill. It refers
to the skills that humans possess.
consists of knowledge
that is accessible by direct test – that is, by
recall or recognition, thus requiring the
conscious awareness of particular learning
experiences or episodes.
consists of knowledge
that is accessible only by indirect tests, which
measure the effects of prior experiences
without recall or recognition of specific
learning episodes.
Memory improvement techniques are
called or
simply . Mnemonics
have been used since the time of the
ancient Greeks and Romans. In ancient
times, before writing was easily
accomplished, educated people were
trained in the art of memorizing.
Pegword technique
(Preview, Questions,
Read, Reflect, Recite, Review)