Title: Introduction to Educational Psychology: Developing a Professional Knowledge Base
1Introduction to Educational Psychology
Developing a Professional Knowledge Base
- EDU 330 Educational Psychology
- Daniel Moos
2Characteristics of Professionalism
3What types of knowledge do teachers need? (I)
Geography teacher uses questions to guide
students understanding has orderly classroom
General pedagogical knowledge (How should I
teach?)
Understanding principles of instruction and
management
Knowledge of learners and learning (How do my
students learn?)
Understanding how learning occurs and
understanding the factors that influence learning
Students learn with concrete examples, especially
with abstract concepts
4What types of knowledge do teachers need? (II)
Knowledge of content (What domain-specific
knowledge do I need to have?)
Geography teacher understands concepts longitude
and latitude
Understanding content you are teaching
Pedagogical content knowledge (How can I most
effectively teach this domain?)
Understanding how to represent content so it is
understandable to your learners
Draws lines on a beach ball to represent these
concepts. Then, relates ball to globe
5Research (I)
Descriptive
Interviews, observations, surveys to describe
events, etc
Relationship ( or -) between two or more
variables
Correlational
Manipulates variables to examine cause effect
Experimental
Applied research to answer school/classroom
question
Action
Provide concrete examples of learning/teaching in
classroom
Case Studies
6Research (II)
- Research has found negative relationships between
achievement and the time teachers spend in
non-instructional activities, such as taking
roll, passing out papers, and explaining
procedures (Good Brophy, 1986 Shuell, 1996). - CORRELATIONAL RESEARCH
7Research (III)
- Teachers were randomly assigned to two groups.
The first groups was trained to provide students
with prompts and cues when students initially
failed to answer a question the second group
taught as they normally did. Students taught by
the trained teachers scored significantly higher
on an achievement test than did students taught
by the second group of teachers in the control
group (Anderson, Evertson, Brophy, 1979). - EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH
8Research (IV)
- A teacher conducts an experiment to determine if
frequent homework increases achievement compared
to infrequent homework. - ACTION RESEARCH
9Research (V)
- Researchers administered a personality test to
4,483 university students who considered majoring
in education, and they later checked the
students records to see who graduated and what
majors they selected (Sears, Kennedy, Kaye,
1997). The researchers found that elementary
education majors tended to fit a profile
described as warm, sociable, responsible, and
caring about people (p. 201), whereas secondary
majors tended to be oriented to the theoretical,
disposed to investigate possibilities and
relationships, and drawn to complexity,
innovation, and change (p. 201). - DESCRIPTIVE RESEARCH
10Research (VI)
- Principle Statements that summarizes results
consistently supported by large number of
research studies - Example Thinking of young children tends to be
dominated by perception - Theory Set of related principles derived from
observations and are used to make predictions
explain phenomena - Example
- Principle 1 Reinforced behaviors increase
frequency of that behavior - Principle 2 Intermittently reinforced behaviors
persist longer than those that are continuously
reinforced - Theory Behaviorism, which attempts to explain
the effect of experiences on behavior
11Ending Discussion
- Of the different roles that teachers perform,
which is most important to grade level or content
level? Least? How does the context of your
teaching situation influence your answer? - Manager
- Motivator
- Instructor
- Evaluator
- What are some personal characteristics that make
teachers effective? Can these be taught or
developed?
12Ending Discussion, continued
- What is the role of research in teacher decision
making? How does knowledge of the classroom help
in this process? - How can research make teachers more reflective?
Besides a thorough knowledge of the research
base, what else can teachers do to make
themselves more reflective?