information processing and cognitive theories of learning

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Information Processing and Cognitive Theories of Learning Prepared by: Younes TAIA Ahlam HILMI Ahmed Dakhissi

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Information Processing and Cognitive Theories of Learning. Prepared by: Younes TAIA Ahlam HILMI Ahmed Dakhissi. What is meant by cognitive information processing theory?. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Information Processing and Cognitive Theories of Learning

Information Processing and Cognitive Theories of Learning

Prepared by: Younes TAIA Ahlam HILMI Ahmed Dakhissi

Page 2: Information Processing and Cognitive Theories of Learning

What is meant by cognitive information processing

theory?

Page 3: Information Processing and Cognitive Theories of Learning

• CIP theory refers to information processing, applied to

various theoretical perspectives dealing with the sequence and

execution of cognitive events.

Page 4: Information Processing and Cognitive Theories of Learning

Models of information processing theory

Sensory Memory Stage Short Term Memory Stage Long Term Memory Stage

Page 5: Information Processing and Cognitive Theories of Learning

Processes of keeping information alive

AttentionRehearsalEncodingretrievalperception

Page 6: Information Processing and Cognitive Theories of Learning

What cognitive strategies help students learn best?

Page 7: Information Processing and Cognitive Theories of Learning

Note Taking is common study strategy in reading and learning from lectures. NT can be effective for certain types of

materials, because it requires mental processing of main ideas, as one makes

decisions about what to write. Several studies have found that the

practice,combined with student note-taking and review, increases student learning .

Page 8: Information Processing and Cognitive Theories of Learning

Underlying/ highlighting key term information that are most important and require a higher level of processing to make dicisions about critical materials…

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Summarizing involves writing brief statements that represent the main ideas of the information being read.

an effective way that helps have clear idea and remember easily intriguing components.

Page 10: Information Processing and Cognitive Theories of Learning

Outlining and mapping: study strategy that requires the student to represent the material studied in skeletal form.

Outlining presents the main points of the material in a hierarchical format, with each

detail organized under a higher-level and category while mapping identify main ideas and then diagram connections between them

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Page 12: Information Processing and Cognitive Theories of Learning
Page 13: Information Processing and Cognitive Theories of Learning

1- MEMORY

What is memory?

Retrieval & Forgetting

Encoding

Page 14: Information Processing and Cognitive Theories of Learning

What is Memory?

“ Life is all memory except the one present moment that goes by so quickly that you can hardly catch it going.”

Tennessee WILLIAMS

Page 15: Information Processing and Cognitive Theories of Learning

Memory is:

• Retention of information over time

• Educational psychologists:

Study how information is placed into memory, how it is stored, and how it is retrieved

View memory in terms of how children actively construct their memory

Page 16: Information Processing and Cognitive Theories of Learning

Memory Processes:

• Encoding

• Storage

• Retrieval & Forgetting

Page 17: Information Processing and Cognitive Theories of Learning

1. Encoding: involves many processes

• a. Rehearsal: Conscious repetition of information over time to increase the time it will stay in memory

• it works best when you need to encode and remember a list of items for a brief period of time. ( it doesn’t work well for retaining information over the long term.)

Page 18: Information Processing and Cognitive Theories of Learning

b. Deep processing: the processing of information occurs on different levels, from shallow to deep, with deep processing producing better memory:

Page 19: Information Processing and Cognitive Theories of Learning

Shallow Proc: Analysis of physical features intermediate Proc: Recognition and Labeling Deep Proc: Process information semantically

If a child sees the word “BOAT”: Shallow: Notice the shapes of the lettersIntermediate: Notice the characteristics of the word, it rhymes with the word: COATDeep: Think about the last time he went with his dad fishing on a boat

Page 20: Information Processing and Cognitive Theories of Learning

C. Elaboration: the extensiveness of information involved in encoding. It works well because it adds to the distinctiveness of memory code:

when you’re searching for a friend in Souk Lhad on a crowded Sunday. if he has common features, it’s very difficult to find him. But if he is quite tall with flaming red hair, it could be easier to find him.

Page 21: Information Processing and Cognitive Theories of Learning

d. Constructing images: Memories are stored as verbal codes or images codes. The more detailed and distinctive the image code, the better your memory will be.

Page 22: Information Processing and Cognitive Theories of Learning

e. Organization: organizing information in meaningful ways when encoding is very good for memory.

The more you present information in an organized way, the easier your SS will remember it.

Page 23: Information Processing and Cognitive Theories of Learning

2. Storage

Children encode information and store it. Afterwards, they remember some info for less than a second, some for a minute, and other info for mns/hours/ even for a life time.

these time frames correspond to memory types: Sensory memory Short-term memory Long-term memory

Page 24: Information Processing and Cognitive Theories of Learning

Sensory memory: holds info from the world in its original sensory form for only an instant / a fleeting moment, then it fades.

Short-term memory: a limited-capacity memory system which is relatively longer. SS can keep track of 7 +/- items without external aids.

Long-term memory: holds enormous amount of info for a long period of time. But not all info is retrieved easily from long-term memory. (Search engines)

Page 25: Information Processing and Cognitive Theories of Learning

3.Retrieval & forgetting

Due to some factors, SS might be able to retrieve information but might forget some.

Retrieval can be as easy as automatic, or as difficult as it requires more effort:

Ex: the months of the year

Page 26: Information Processing and Cognitive Theories of Learning

A. Retrieval

the position of the item affects how easy or difficult to retrieve it. Recall is better for items at the beginning and end rather than for items in the middle.

Encoding specificity model: associations formed at the time of

encoding or learning.

Page 27: Information Processing and Cognitive Theories of Learning

B: Acquiring expertise

what determines whether or not someone becomes an expert?

Page 28: Information Processing and Cognitive Theories of Learning

2. EXPERTISE

Expertise and Learning

Acquiring Expertise

Expertise and Teaching

Page 29: Information Processing and Cognitive Theories of Learning

a. Expertise and Learning

The contribution of prior knowledge to our ability to remember is evident. (expert VS novice)

organization and depth of knowledge: when knowledge is organized around important ideas/concepts in meaningful ways, it is easier to retrieve it.

Page 30: Information Processing and Cognitive Theories of Learning

Fluent retrieval: the effort involved in retrieving relevant info varies greatly, experts do that “fluently” and effortlessly but novice people / learners need a great deal of effort.

Adaptive expertise: adaptive experts are able to approach new situations flexibly: teachers who are adaptive experts are flexible and open to rethinking ideas and practices to improve their SS learning.

Page 31: Information Processing and Cognitive Theories of Learning

• use of good strategies helps SS become effective: note taking, PQ4R

PREVIEW QUESTION READ REFLECT RECITE REVIEW

Page 32: Information Processing and Cognitive Theories of Learning

b. Acquiring expertise

what determines whether or not someone becomes an expert?

Page 33: Information Processing and Cognitive Theories of Learning

Practice Motivation

Talent

Page 34: Information Processing and Cognitive Theories of Learning

c. Expertise and Teaching

“Being an expert in a particular domain does not mean that the expert is good at helping others learn it.”

Bransford, 2006

Page 35: Information Processing and Cognitive Theories of Learning

Characteristics of an expert teacher

PEDAGOGICAL CONTENT KNOWLEDGE:

good at monitoring SS learning and assessing SS progress

Aware of the difficulties their SS are likely to encounter

Aware of SS existing knowledge

Makes new info relevant

TECHNOLOGY

Page 36: Information Processing and Cognitive Theories of Learning

“ in the absence of the expert pedagogical awareness of their own SS, inexpert

teachers simply rely on textbook publishers’ materials, which, of course,

contain no information about the particular pedagogical needs of SS in

the teacher’s classroom.”Brophy, 2004

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Metacognition

The learner’s knowledge about her/his own cognitive

processes.Dr. Dov liberman

Page 39: Information Processing and Cognitive Theories of Learning

Metacognition

Metamemory Metacomprehension Self-Regulation

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How Can You do It as a Teacher?

Characterize performancesMake students aware they are responsible for

their own learning.State objectives or learning outcomes.

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How Can You do It as a Teacher?

Provide practice tests and homework.Provide guided practice before homework.

Have students participate in complex tasks such as presentations and report

writing.

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Self-Regulatory Strategies

Compare performance against a set of performance standards (e.g., salient behaviors)

Compare performance against stated objectives

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Predict outcomes on various tasksReciprocal reading

Questioning Summarizing Clarifying Predicting

Reciprocal teaching

Self-Regulatory Strategies

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Promote active listening.

Analysis of problem solving - explain what was done and why.

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The END