Title: THEME 3: HOW PEOPLE LEARN
1THEME 3 HOW PEOPLE LEARN
LEARNING THEORIES
- SESSION 3
- APPROACHES TO LEARNING
- THEORETICAL MODELS
2 Think about your own learning
- Would you categorise your learning usually as
3surface
4deep
5or strategic
6(No Transcript)
7Or something else?
8http//www.audiosparx.com/sa/play/port_lofi.cfm/so
und_iid.4696
9APPROACHES TO STUDY
- Marton (1975) Approaches to study
- Students approaches to a task (their intention),
(perhaps) determines the level of engagement
thus the quality of the outcomes - These approaches may be classified as either DEEP
or SURFACE - More recently extended to include STRATEGIC
LEARNING (Entwistle, 1997) - http//www.learning-styles.co.uk/enh_eyls_msl_.php
- http//ericec.org/digests/e638.html
10SURFACE APPROACH TO LEARNING
- Generically refer to inappropriate learning
activities as comprising a surface approach to
learning. - Intention to (merely?) complete the given task
- Memorize the information - Rote learning
- No distinction between new ideas existing
knowledge - Superficial cognitive processing gives the
impression that max. learning has occurred. - Facts are learned outside a context of meaning
- To cope with course requirements
11SURFACE APPROACH
- Learner sees task as external imposition
- Instrumentally or pragmatically motivated and
seek to meet demands of task with minimum effort - Overall involved in study without reflection on
purpose or strategy with the focus of that study
on the words, the text, or the formulae.
12- Adopt strategies which include
- focus on unrelated parts of the task
- separate treatment of related parts (such as
principles and examples) - focus on what are seen as essentials (factual
data) - reproduction of the essentials as accurately as
possible - rote memorising information for assessment
purposes rather than for understanding - (PROSSER TRIGWELL, 1999) Ch.1
13DEEP APPROACH TO LEARNING
- Generically refer to appropriate learning
activities as comprising a deep approach to
learning. - Intention to seek and understand meaning
- Relate concepts to existing experience
- Distinguish between new ideas existing
knowledge - Critically evaluate determine key themes
concepts - Facts are learnt within a meaningful framework
- To understand for yourself
14DEEP APPROACH
- Learner aims to understand ideas and seek
meanings - Learner has intrinsic interest in task and
expectation of enjoyment in carrying it out - Overall focus on meaning in argument, the message
or the relationships, aware of meanings carried
by words, text or formulae
15- to help satisfy curiosity e.g.
- making task coherent with own experience
- relating and distinguishing evidence/argument
- looking for patterns/underlying principles
- integrating task with existing awareness
- Seeing parts of task making up the whole
- forming hypotheses
- relating what s/he understand from other parts
of the same subject and from different subjects - (PROSSER TRIGWELL, 1999) Ch.1
16STRATEGIC APPROACH TO LEARNING
- Often seen as engaging elements of both
- surface deep approaches
- Put consistent effort into studying
- Find the right conditions materials for
learning - Managing time and effort effectively
- Being alert to assessment requirements criteria
- Gearing work to perceived preference of lecturers
- To achieve the best possible grades
17PRACTICAL TASK
- What factors might contribute to a particular
approach to study being adopted? - Please provide a practical example!
- How might this awareness impact upon your own
professional practice?
18BIGGS MODEL of CONSTRUCTIVE ALIGNMENT
- To encourage deep learning focus on
- PRESAGE student factors and teaching context
- PROCESS activities focused to encourage deep and
discourage surface learning - PRODUCT learning outcomes facts skills
structure transfer involvement - http//www.engsc.ac.uk/er/theory/constructive_alig
nment.asp
19Factors encourage surface learning from
students side
- Intention only to achieve minimal pass meal
ticket? Relevance? - Non-academic priorities exceeding academic
- Insufficient time, workload too high
- Misunderstanding requirements recall adequate
- A cynical view of education
- High anxiety
- Genuine inability to understand particular
content at a deep level - BIGGS (1999)
20Factors that encourage surface learning from
teachers side
- Teaching in piecemeal fashion providing lists,
not bringing out intrinsic structure of subject - Assessing for independent facts short answers
and multiple-choice tests - Teaching and especially assessing in a way that
encourages cynicism - Providing insufficient time to engage in tasks,
emphasising coverage at the expense of depth - Creating undue anxiety or low expectations of
success Anyone who cant understand this isnt
fit to be at university. - BIGGS(1999)
21Factors that encourage deep learning from
students side
- Intention to engage the task meaningfully and
appropriately (intrinsic curiosity or
determination to do well) - Appropriate background knowledge ability to
focus at high conceptual level, working from
first principles, requires well-structured
knowledge base - A genuine preference, and ability, for working
conceptually rather than with unrelated detail - ( BIGGS,1999)
22Factors that encourage deep learning in the
teaching environment
- Teaching and assessing in a way that encourages a
positive working atmosphere, so students can make
mistakes and learn from them - Emphasising depth of learning, rather than
breadth or coverage - In general, and most importantly, using teaching
and assessment methods that support the explicit
aims and objectives of the course - (BIGGS,1999)
23Factors that encourage deep learning in the
teaching environment
- Teaching in such a way as to bring out the
structure of the subject explicitly - Teaching to elicit a positive response from
students, e.g. by questioning or presenting
problems, rather than teaching to expound
information - Teaching by building on what students already
know - Confronting and eradicating students
misconceptions - Assessing for structure rather than for
independent facts - (BIGGS,1999)
24PROMOTING DEEP LEARNING
- PROVIDE CLEAR STATEMENT OF GOALS
- INCLUDE LEARNER INPUT TO COURSE STRUCTURE AND
CONTENT - TUTOR/LEARNER INTERACTION
- LEARNER/LEARNER INTERACTION
- ACTIVE/INTERACTIVE EXERCISES
- TEACH LEARNING SKILLS EXPLICITLY
- CHOICE AND/OR RANGE OF ASSESSMENT TASKS
- ENGAGE LEARNERS IN INVESTIGATION AND REFLECTION
- COLLABORATIVE PROJECTS
- FULL FEEDBACK
25- Should we be promoting deep, surface or strategic
learning? - Do we promote any of these unintentionally?
- How does the use of virtual learning environments
affect the student or teacher approach to
learning? - How does deep learning relate to teaching
smarter?
26Not everything that is deep is beautiful..
27(No Transcript)
28Or serious
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30REFERENCES
- BIGGS, J., 1999,
- Teaching for Quality at University
- Open UP and SRHE, Buckingham
- Especially Chapter 2
- for theory of Constructive alignment
- PROSSER,M. TRIGWELL,K, 1999,
- Understanding Learning Teaching The
Experience in Higher Education - Open UP and SRHE, Buckingham
- Especially Chapter 7
31- Deep and surface approaches to learning an
introduction - http//www.ntlf.com/html/pi/9512/article1.htm
- http//www.engsc.ac.uk/er/theory/learning.asp
- http//www.learningandteaching.info/learning/deeps
urf.htm - http//www.iml.uts.edu.au/learnteach/enhance/under
stand/index.html - http//www.lsda.org.uk/files/PDF/1543.pdf
- Read the original authors for detail