Hes Sas 3 - Ponce, Kristel Mae o PDF
Hes Sas 3 - Ponce, Kristel Mae o PDF
Hes Sas 3 - Ponce, Kristel Mae o PDF
Learning
• Learning: a relatively permanent change in mental processing, emotional functioning, and behavior as a result of
experience
• Learning Theory: a coherent framework of integrated constructs and principles that describe, explain, or predict
how people learn
Behaviorist Theory
Respondent Conditioning
EXAMPLE
Operant Conditioning
• Learning occurs as the organism responds to stimuli in the environment and is reinforced for making a particular
response.
• A reinforcer is applied after a response, strengthening the probability that the response will be performed again
under similar conditions.
• To increase behavior
A. Positive reinforcement
B. Negative reinforcement (escape or avoidance conditioning)
• To decrease behavior
A. Nonreinforcement
B. Punishment
Cognitive Dynamics
Gestalt Perspective
• Perception and the patterning of stimuli (gestalt) are the keys to learning, with each learner perceiving,
interpreting, and reorganizing experiences in her/his own way.
• Learning occurs through the reorganization of elements to form new insights and understanding.
• Perception is selective.
Information-Processing Perspective
• The way individuals perceive, process, store, and retrieve information from experiences determines how learning
occurs and what is learned.
• Organizing information and making it meaningful aids the attention and storage process; learning occurs through
guidance, feedback, and assessing and correcting errors.
• Learning depends on the stage of cognitive functioning with qualitative, sequential changes in perception,
language, and thought occurring as children and adults interact with the environment.
• Recognize the developmental stage and provide appropriate experiences to encourage discovery.
• Learning is heavily influenced by the culture and occurs as a social process in interaction with others.
• A person’s knowledge may not necessarily reflect reality, but through collaboration and negotiation, new
understanding is acquired.
• An individual’s perceptions, beliefs, and social judgments are affected strongly by social interaction,
communication, groups, and the social situation.
Individuals formulate causal explanations to account for behavior that has significant consequences for their
attitudes and actions (attribution theory)
Cognitive-Emotional Perspective
• Concepts: stage of personality development, conscious and unconscious motivations, ego-strength, emotional
conflicts, defense mechanisms
• To change behavior, work to make unconscious motivations conscious, build ego-strength, and resolve emotional
conflicts.
• Motivation: libido, life force, death wish, pleasure principle, reality principle, conscious and unconscious conflicts,
developmental stage, defenses
• Educator: reflective interpreter; listen and pose questions to stimulate insights
• Transfer: remove barriers such as resistance, transference reactions, and emotional conflicts
• Learning occurs on the basis of a person’s motivation, derived from needs, the desire to grow in positive ways,
self-concept, and subjective feelings.
• Learning is facilitated by caring facilitators and a nurturing environment that encourage spontaneity, creativity,
emotional expression, and positive choices.
Self- Actualization
Need to fulfill one’s potential
Esteem
Need to be perceived as competent,
have confidence and independence,
and have status, recognition, and
appreciation
Safety
Need for security, stability, structure,
and protection as well as freedom
from fear
Physiological
To have basic survival needs met
(food, water, warmth, sleep)
Motor Learning
● Feedback
Intrinsic (inherent) feedback
Sensory and perceptual information that arises when a movement is produced
Extrinsic (augmented or enhanced) feedback
Provided to learner from outside source (nurse, biofeedback)
Learning Hindrances
• Ignoring common considerations may hinder learning.
• Other learning hindrances
• Lack of clarity and meaningfulness to what is being learned
• Fear, neglect, or harsh punishment
• Negative or ineffective role models
• Practice new knowledge or skills (mentally and physically) under varied conditions.
• Learner may need incentives and rewards but not always.
• Assess and evaluate learner on skills soon after session as well as at later times to evaluate knowledge transfer.
You will answer and rationalize this by yourself. This will be recorded as your quiz. 1 point will be given to every correct
answer and another 1 point for correct rationalization. You have 30 minutes to do this.
Multiple Choice
1. A person’s knowledge may not necessarily reflect reality, but through collaboration and negotiation, new understanding
is acquired.
A. Respondent Conditioning
B. Social Constructivist Perspective
C. Gestalt Perspective
D. Operant Conditioning
Answer: B
Rationale: Learning is heavily influenced by the culture and occurs as a social process in interaction with others.
A person’s knowledge may not necessarily reflect reality, but through collaboration and negotiation, new understanding is
acquired.
2. A learning that occurs as the organism responds to stimuli in the environment and is reinforced for making a
particular response.
A. Respondent Conditioning
B. Social Constructivist Perspective
C. Gestalt Perspective
D. Operant Conditioning
Answer: D
Rationale: Learning occurs as the organism responds to stimuli in the environment and is reinforced for making a particular
response. A reinforcer is applied after a response, strengthening the probability that the response will be performed again
under similar condition.
3. A Perception and the patterning of stimuli are the keys to learning, with each learner perceiving, interpreting, and
reorganizing experiences in her/his own way.
A. Respondent Conditioning
B. Social Constructivist Perspective
C. Gestalt Perspective
D. Operant Conditioning
4. Also called association learning or classical/Pavlovian conditioning where learning occurs as the organism
responds to stimulus conditions and forms associations.
A. Respondent Conditioning
B. Social Constructivist Perspective
C. Gestalt Perspective
D. Operant Conditioning
Answer: A
Rationale: Also called "association learning" or "classical/Pavlovian conditioning." Learning occurs as the organism
responds to stimulus conditions and forms associations. It is a neutral stimulus that is paired with an unconditioned
stimulus–unconditioned response connection until the neutral stimulus becomes a conditioned stimulus that elicits
the conditioned response.
5. A phase in the Social Learning Theory that is influenced by vicarious reinforcement and punishment
A. Motivational
B. Attentional
C. Retention
D. Reproduction
Answer: A
Rationale: Influence by vicarious reinforcement and punishment. Covert cognitive activity, consequences of behavior, and
self-reinforcement and punishment.
RATIONALIZATION ACTIVITY
Identify the following terms and give their motivation:
Keywords Motivation
1. Intrinsic feedback Inherent Sensory/perceptual information with
movement
2. Neuroscience Thinking, learning, & behavior Stress and learning
You are done with the session! Let’s track your progress.
2. Also, record two things that you found interesting about the topic
3. One question
Do all nurses can handle psychological problems?
END NOTE: The instructor will inform the students of the topic for the next Session Determinants of Learning