Psychological Foundation of Learning and
Development
                
            PGDT 412
                    by: Fentahun E.(M.A)
                   fentahunpsych@gmail.com
                         0920773086
UNIT ONE
1. BASIC CONCEPTS OF
PSYCHOLOGY OF LEARNING
What   do you think about :
 psychology
 Learning
 Education
 Educational psychology?
   Psychology is scientific study of behaviour and mental
    process of human and animal .
   Educational psychology is an application psychological
    theories and principles in the areas of education
   branch of Psychology which deals with teaching
    and learning” (Skinner)
   the     systematic     study    of        the    educational
    development of a child (Stephen)
   Peel-   “Educational   Psychology    is    the   science   of
    Education.”
   branches of applied psychology concerned with the
    application   of   the   principles,   techniques   and   other
    resource of psychology to the solution of the problems
    confronting the teacher attempting to direct the growth of
    children toward defined objectives
   concerned with an understanding of:
   The child, development, needs and potentialities.
   The learning situation that affect learning.
   The learning processes, its nature and the ways to make it
    effective.
   the central theme of Educational Psychology is Psychology
    of learning
               Psychology of Learning
 Theoretical    science that covers the various
    psychological theories which relate with learning
 concerned    with such problems as:
 How   do children acquire skills?
 When    is learning more effective?
 What   are the factors that help the learning Process?
   How do we measure the amount of learning?
 Are   there any economic methods of memorizing?
 Why   do we forget?
   Can memory be improved?
   Psychology helps the teacher to get answers to these
    questions.
   It tells us that learning becomes more effective if factors like
    motivation and interest are taken into consideration by
    every teacher.
   helped the teacher in modifying his/her approach to the
    teaching learning process.
   used in formulation curriculum for different stage. Attempts
    are made to provide subjects and activities in the curriculum
    which are in conformity with the needs of the students, their
    developmental characteristics, learning patterns and also
    needs of the society
     1.2 Scope of Educational Psychology
1. The Learner
   It familiarizes us with need of knowing the leaves and
    deals with the techniques of knowing him well.
   topics studied included
   the innate abilities and capabilities of the individual
    differences and their measurements,
   the overt, convert, conscious as well as unconscious
    behavior of the learner,
   the characteristics of his growth and development at
    each stage beginning from childhood to adulthood.
2. The Learning Process
it   deals with the nature of learning and
 how it takes place and contains the topics
 such as laws, principles and theories of
 learning,   remembering    and     forgetting,
 perceiving, concept formation, thinking,
 reasoning     process,   problem     solving,
 transfer of training, ways and means of
 effective learning etc
3. Learning Situation
   It also deals with the environment factors and
    learning situation which come midway between the
    learner and the teacher.
   Topics   like   classroom    climate   and   group
    dynamics techniques and aids which facilitate
    learning,       evaluation    techniques,     and
    practices, guidance and counseling etc. which
    help in the smooth functioning of the teaching
    learning process.
4. . Teaching Situation
 It   suggests the techniques of teaching.
 It   also helps in deciding what learning situation
  should     be    provided    by    teacher    to   learner
  according to his mental and physical age, his
  previous     knowledge       and   interest    level,    by
  describing the learner’s characteristics, what
  teaching        aids   are   appropriate       for      the
  particular subject.
5. Evaluation of Learning Performance
   Main objective of education is all round development of the
    learner.
   It includes cognitive, affective and psychomotor aspects of
    personality.
   It suggests various tool and techniques for assessment and
    evaluation such as performance test, oral test and written
    test.
   It does not stop at measurement only, after the testing
    results of the test analyzed the causes for poor performance,
    etc… helped by guidance and counseling, the experienced
6. The Teacher
 Educational   Psychology emphasizes the need
  of knowing the self for a teacher to play his
  role properly in the process of education.
 It   throws light on the essential personality
  traits, interests, aptitudes, the characteristics
  of effective teaching etc., so as to inspire, help
  teacher handle the stress, conflict and anxiety
  by giving insight in their own personality.
What is the difference between
  learning and education?
1. Education is the process of imparting knowledge,
values, skills and attitudes, which can be beneficial to
an individual. On the contrary, learning is the process
of adopting knowledge, values and skills.
2. Learning is the basic instinct possessed by all
individuals. On the other hand, education is acquired
by individuals.
3. Learning is said to be an on going process.
Education is something that one gets at some point in
their life.
4. Learning is an informal process, and education is a
formal process.
5. Learning is knowledge gained through experience,
and education is knowledge gained through teaching.
6. Education is something that an individual gets from
an outside source. On the other hand, learning is
something that evolves in the inner self.
              UNIT TWO
Developmental needs of the learners and
       implications for practice
2. The Concept of Development
Growth    refers to quantitative changes
 in body proportions, size, which include
 physical changes in height, weight, size,
 internal organs, etc.
old features like baby fat, hair and
 teeth, etc., disappear and new features
 like facial hair are acquired. the second
 set of teeth, primary and secondary sex
 characteristics, etc., appear.
   The rate of growth differs from one part of the body to the
    other.
   Maturation: is readiness for a given activity. E.g, if a
    girl is ready for marriage, you may say she is matured for
    marriage.
   qualitative changes resulting due to heredity.
   pubertal changes such as menstruation, sexual desire,
    ovulation, etc will occur for all people at some age
    regardless of what happens in the environment.
   Its onset may be delayed or hastened because of
   Learning:    is   a   relatively   permanent   change   in
    behavior or actions brought by some environmental or
    external event.
   all changes in behavior are not results of learning
   For instance temporary changes in behavior as a result
    of fatigue, illness and hunger are not examples of
    learning.
   For instance, if you come to fear a rat or to dislike one
    of your teachers, this behavior results from your past
    experience and is examples of learning.
   Development, refers to qualitative changes taking
    place simultaneously with quantitative changes of
    growth.
   a progressive series of orderly, coherent changes.
   The term progressive signifies that changes are
    directional,   that   they   lead   forward    rather   than
    backward.
   Orderly     and   coherent    suggest   that    a   definite
    relationship between the changes taking place and
    those that precede or will follow them.
                2.2 Aspects of Human
                    Development
   Physical    Development:            involves   the    body’s
    physical   makeup,     including     the   brain,    nervous
    system, muscles, and senses, and the need for food,
    drink, and sleep.
   Cognitive Development: involves the ways that
    growth and change in intellectual capabilities and
    influence a person’s behavior.
   It   emphasizes      intellectual     abilities,    including
    learning, memory, problem solving, and intelligence
 Socio-Emotional      Development: It involves
  changes in the individual’s relationships
  with other people, changes in emotions and
  changes in personality (personality is a
  person’s unique and relatively consistent way
  of feeling, reacting and behaving).
 A child initially interacts with the care giver,
  usually the mother. Through time however, the
  child starts to interact with the elders, then
  with peers, then teachers, and finally with
  different members of the community. Such
  change in an individual in terms of scope of
  people with whom he/she interacts and
  complexity of relationship with other people is
  called Socio-emotional development.
  Social development refers to the long-term changes in
   relationships and interactions involving self, peers, and family.
 It includes both positive changes, such as how friendships
   develop, and negative changes, such as aggression or
   bullying.
 The social developments that are the most obviously relevant
   to classroom life fall into three main areas:
(1) changes in self-concept and in relationships among students
    and teachers,
(2) changes in basic needs or personal motives,
(3) changes in sense of rights and responsibilities.
 each of these areas has a broad, well-known theory (and
 theorist) that provides a framework for thinking about how the
 area relates to teaching. For development of self-concept and
 relationships, it is the theory of Erik Erikson;
 for development of personal motives, it is the theory of
 Abraham Maslow;
 for development of ethical knowledge and beliefs, it is the work
 of Lawrence Kohlberg and his critic, Carol Gilligan.
2.3. Controversies in Human Development
Nature     versus       Nurture    Controversy:
  Nature refers to an organism’s biological
  inheritance,   while    nurture   refers     to   its
  environmental experiences.         The nature-
  nurture controversy thus involves the debate
  about   whether    development      is     primarily
  governed by nature or nurture
 Continuity            versus        Discontinuity:
    development involves gradual, cumulative
    change      (continuity)   or  distinct   stages
    (discontinuity). Thus, the question of Continuity
    versus Discontinuity controversy is whether
    these developmental changes appear as a
    result of slow but steady progressions or as a
    result of abrupt changes and stages.
   Proponents of the continuity view say that
    development is a continuous process that is gradual
    and cumulative. For example, a child learns to
    crawl, and then to stand and then to walk. … For
    example, children go from only being able to think in
    very literal terms to being able to think abstractly
The       discontinuity      view     sees
 development        as    more     abrupt-a
 succession of changes that produce
 different behaviours in different age-
 specific life periods called stages.
for example at birth and puberty. …
 Many physical and biological systems
 are capable of changing in an abrupt,
 discontinuous way.
Currently, developmental psychologists
 agree that development is neither
 extremely continuous nor extremely
 discontinuous.        At some stages,
 Stability   versus Change: the degree to which
 early traits and characteristics persist through
 life or change.
 Many   developmentalists who emphasize stability
 in development argue that stability is the result
 of heredity and possibly early experience in life.
 Developmentalists   who emphasize change take
 the more optimistic view that later experiences
 can produce change. The potential for change
 exists throughout the life-span.
2.4. Principles of Development
Development follows a pattern or a
sequence (an orderly sequence):
a.  Cephalocaudal               principle:
    Development tends to proceed from
    the head downward.
According to this principle, the child
  first gains control of the head, then the
  arms, then the legs.
• By 6 to 12 months of age, infants start
  to gain leg control and may be able to
  crawl, stand, or walk.
b.      Proximodistal         principle:
Development also proceeds from the
center of the body outward according
Accordingly, the spinal cord develops
 before other parts of the body.
The child’s arms develop before the
 hands, and the hands and feet
 develop before the fingers and toes.
 Fingers and toes are the last to
 develop
c. Locomotion: locomotion develops in a
sequence in all infants of different cultures of
the world.
The sequence is creeping, crawling, standing
  and walking.
The time may vary in the development of
  locomotion but every infant passes through
  these stages.
ii. Development proceeds from general to specific
responses:
 It  moves from a generalized to
  localized behavior. The newborn infant
  moves its whole body at one time
  instead of moving only one part of it.
 It makes random kicking with its legs
  before it can coordinate the leg
  muscles well enough to crawl or to
  walk.
iii. Development is a continuous
process:
Development does not occur in spurts.
Growth continues from the moments
   of conception until the individual
   reaches maturity.
It takes place at slow regular pace
   rather than by ‘leaps and bounds’.
Although development is a continuous
   process, yet the pace of growth is not
   even, during infancy and early years,
   growth moves fast and later it slow
   down.
iv. Different aspects of development develop
at different rates
 Neither   all parts of the body grow at the same rate
 nor do all aspects of mental growth proceed
 equally. They reach maturity at different times.
v. Most traits are correlated in development:
 Generally,    it   is   seen   that   the   child   whose
 intellectual development is above average is so in
 health size, sociability and special aptitudes.
vi. Growth is complex:
 All   of its aspects are closely interrelated.
 The     child’s mental development is intimately
  related to his physical growth and its needs.
vii. Growth is a product of the interaction of
the organism and environment:
 Among       the   environmental     factors      one   can
  mention nutrition, climate the conditions in the
  home, the type of social organization in which
  individual moves and lives.
viii. There are wide individual differences
in growth:
 Individual differences in growth are caused by
  differences in heredity and environment.
x. Development is both quantitative and
qualitative:
 These two aspects are inseparable. The child
  not only grows in ‘size’; he grows up or
  matures in structure and function too.
xi. Development is predictable:
 It is possible for us to predict at an early age
  the    range     within   which    the   mature
  development of the child is likely to fall.
  However, mental development cannot be
  predicted with the same degree of accuracy.
2.6 STAGES OF DEVELOPMENT
Age      Stage of        Description of Each Stages
Groups   Development
Birth to Infancy         rapid growth and development.
2                        There are changes in body proportions as
                         well as intellectual growth.
2 to 6   Early childhood preschool period.
                         It is also called the pre-gang age.
                         the child seeks gain control over his
                         environment.
                         starts to learn to make social adjustment.
6 to 12   Late        the primary school age. child expected to
          childhood   acquire the fundamentals of knowledge that are
                      considered essential for successful adjustment
                      to adult life. He/ She is also expected to learn
                      certain essential skills.
12 to 18 Adolescenc period of physiological change. sexually
          e           mature. intensified personal interaction with
                      peers of the same and opposite sex.
18 to 40 Young        The responsible to important decisions like
          adulthood   choosing a career, a life partner, etc. Young
                      adulthood begins with setting goals and
40 to 60   Middle    the individual starts feeling sense of
           adulthood uprooting and dissatisfaction during the
                     forties. A physical decline in the form of
                     wrinkles, thickening waistlines, graying and
                     thinning hair start appearing. The changes
                     are often termed middle life transition,
                     middle age revolt, mid-career crisis or
                     middle-age slump. These terms point, the
                     loss of youth and the coming of old age. In
                     women, hormonal changes of menopause
                     (ending of menstruation) generate anxiety
                     and depression.
Over   Late        Aging is a process, which causes loss of
60     adulthood   vitality.
                   Aged adults are more concerned about their
                   health and death. Their visit to doctors is
                   more frequent. Retirement has the worst
                   impact on aged adults. They gradually lose
                   their sense of meaningfulness in life.
                   Some develop interests in social service and
                   spend their time in financial planning,
                   reading, travelling, visiting religious places
                   and enjoying nature.
         UNIT THREE
Developmental   Characteristics
Developmental Characteristics of
Adolescence (Age 12- 18 Years)
Adolescence    is a developmental
 period that marks the end of childhood
 and the beginning of adulthood;
it   is  a   transitional  period   of
 considerable biological, cognitive,
 social, and personality changes.
    1.   Physical Development
Pubertal    changes (Primary and
 Secondary Sex Characteristics)
The primary sex characteristics are the
 organs necessary for reproduction.
In the female, the sex organs are the
 ovaries, uterus and the vagina; in the
 male, the testes, prostate gland, penis,
 and seminal vesicles.
During puberty, these organs enlarge
 and mature. In boys, the first sign of
 puberty is the growth of the testes and
 scrotum.
 The   secondary sexual characteristics are
  physiological signs of sexual maturation that
  do not directly involve the sex organs:
 for example, the breasts of females and the
  broad shoulders of males. changes in the
  voice and skin texture, muscular development,
  and the growth of pubic, facial, and body hair.
 The first signs of puberty in girls are usually
  the growing of the breasts and the growth of
  pubic hair.
 Some adolescent boys, much to their distress,
  experience temporary breast enlargement and
  this is normal and may last about 18 months
The  voice deepens, the skin becomes
 coarser and oiler. Acne is more common
 in boys and seems related to increased
 amounts of testosterone.
Pubic hair, which is at first straight and
 silky and eventually becomes coarse,
 dark, and curly, appears in different
 patterns in males and females.
Some     people may move through
 puberty very quickly and others more
 slowly. Girls on average, begin to show
 pubertal changes at 8 to 10 years of
 age.
Variations    and Effects of Physical Changes
 Several studies in the past two decades confirm
  that adolescents’ early or late maturation has
  important consequences for them in their
  relationships with both adults and their peers.
 Feedback system they get from peers may be
  different. Early matured get positive late
  matured get negative feedback which influence
  self concept.
 early maturing boys perceived themselves
  more positively and had more successful peer
  relations than did their late –maturing
  counterparts. The findings for early maturing
  girls were similar but not as strong as boys
early     maturation    increases    girls’
 vulnerability to a number of problems
 like smoking, drink, be depressed, have
 an eating disorder, request earlier
 independence from parents, and have
 older friends; and their bodies are likely
 to elicit responses from males that lead
 to earlier dating and earlier sexual
 experiences.
Some other researchers have also found
 that the early maturing girls had
 lower educational and occupational
 attainment in adulthood.
Body    Image
 Body image refers to one’s concept of one’s
  physical appearance. It is not surprising that the
  dramatic physical changes of adolescence have
  psychological implications.
 In addition to feelings about wet dreams or the
  onset of menstruation; many young people
  have strong reactions to changes in physical
  appearance and to early and late maturation.
 Boys want to be tall, broad-shouldered, and
  athletic; and girls want to be pretty, slim but
  shapely, with nice hair and skin.
 Teenagers of both sexes worry about their
  weight, their complexion, and their facial
  features.
   b. Cognitive Development
According  to Piaget, adolescents enter the
 highest level of cognitive development-
 formal operations
when they develop the capacity for abstract
 thought occurs around age 12, gives them a
 new way to manipulate (operate on)
 information.
They   can imagine possibilities, test
 hypotheses, and form theories.
 Adolescents     begin    to   understand      abstract
  propositions and try to reason logically about them.
 This kind of logical problem solving is referred to as
  hypothetical deductive reasoning. .
This  is a type of reasoning in which
 adolescents have the cognitive ability
 to develop hypotheses, or best
 guesses, about ways to solve problems,
 such as an algebraic equation.
Then they systematically deduce, or
 conclude which is the best path to
 follow in solving the equation
Adolescent     Egocentrism
Difficulty differentiating one’s own thoughts
 and feelings from those of other people.
The young child’s egocentrism is rooted in
 ignorance that different people have
 different perspectives, but the adolescent’s
 reflects an enhanced ability to reflect about
 one’s own and others’ thoughts.
Piaget said that adolescents produce their
 own characteristic form of egocentrism in
 terms of two dimensions of thinking (1) the
 personal fable and (2) the imaginary
 audience
Adolescents   tend to view the world as a
 stage in which they are the principal actors
 and the entire world is an audience.
According to Elkind, this characteristics
 account for the fact that teenagers tend to
 be extremely self-conscious and self-
 preoccupied:
the preoperational child is egocentric in the
 sense that he is unable to take another
 person’s point of view. The adolescent on
 the other hand, takes the other person’s
 point of view to an extreme degree. As a
 result, adolescents tend to view themselves
 as somehow unique and even heroic
 personal fable dimension, adolescents’ sense of
  personal uniqueness makes them feel that no one
  can understand how they really feel. For example, an
  adolescent girl thinks that her mother possibly
  cannot sense the hurt she feels because her
  boyfriend has broken up with her.
 Imaginary audience refers to the heightened self-
  consciousness of adolescents that is reflected in
  their belief that others are interested in them as they
  themselves are.
 involves attention getting behavior –the attempt to
  be noticed, visible and “on stage”.
 adolescent’s belief that everyone in the local
  environment is primarily concerned with the
  appearance and behavior of the adolescent.
 Mistaken indication that others always watching and
  evaluating them.
  Immature Aspects of Adolescent Thought
 Finding     fault    with    authority     figures:
  adolescents now realize that the adults that they
  once worshiped fall far short of their ideals, and
  they feel compelled to say so-loudly and often.
 Argumentativeness: adolescents often become
  argumentative as they practice their new abilities
  to explore the nuances of the problem and to
  build a case for their viewpoint.
 Indecisiveness: because they are now more
  aware of how many choices life offers, many
  teenagers have trouble making up their minds
  even about such simple things as whether to go
  to the mall with a friend or to the library to work
  on a school assignment.
Apparent          hypocrisy:      young
 adolescents do not often recognize the
 difference between expressing an ideal
 and living up to it.
Self-consciousness:          adolescents
 often assume that everyone else is
 thinking about the same thing they are
 thinking about: themselves.
Assumption of invulnerability: bad
 things may not affect them
c. Social Development
Increased    peer group influence
 Adolescents spend most of their time with
  outside the home and with members of
  the peer group, so peers have a greater
  influence    on    the   attitudes,   speeches,
  interests, appearance,    and    behaviour    of
  adolescents. Being recognized as a popular
  member of a peer group is an important
  adolescent need.
 The adolescents often get into argument
  with their parents and elders since they want to
  break away from their control. As adolescence
  progress, peer group influences begin to wane.
 Changes    in social behaviour
 Attraction towards members of the opposite sex
  is prominent characteristic.
 New social groupings
 The gangs of the childhood gradually break and
  the interest in the organised groups controlled
  by the adults also wanes. They like to be a part
  of the group control of the group controlled by
  them
 New values in selection of friends
 Adolescents    want as friends those whose
  interests and values are similar to theirs,who
  understand them and make them feel secure
  and in whom they can confide problems and
  discuss matters they feel
    D.   Development of Identity
Sense  of who they are, where they
 are heading, and where they fit into
 society.
What kind of career do I want?
What religious, moral, and political
 values should I adopt?
Who am I as a man or a woman, and
 as a sexual being?
Just where do I fi t into society?
 Erikson   used the term identity crisis to capture
  the sense of confusion, and even anxiety, that
  adolescents may feel as they think about who
  they are today and try to decide “What kind of
  self can (or should) I become?
 the    fifth stage in Erickson’s psychosocial
  development.
 identity diffusion a lack of ability to commit
  oneself, to an occupational or ideological position
  and to assume a recognizable station in life.
 Another danger is that adolescents might fashion
  a negative identity a degraded self-image and
  social role or the formation of deviant identity-
  a life style at odds with, or at least not supported
  by the values and expectations of the society.
James    E. Marcia examined the development
  and validation and ego identity by
  interviewing college students to find out how
  they felt about future occupations, religious
  ideology, and worldview.
based on the presence or absence of crisis
  and commitment.
Crisis is a period of identity development
  during which the adolescent is choosing
  among meaningful alternative;
    commitment is a part of identity
  development in which adolescents show a
  personal investment in what they are going
  to do
 Identity    diffusion (no crisis, no commitment)
    E.g “I haven’t really thought much about religion, and I
      guess I don’t know exactly what I believe.”
   Identity foreclosure (no crisis, commitment
    E.g “My parents are Baptists and so I’m a Baptist; it’s just
     the way I grew up.”
 Identity moratorium: (crisis, no commitment): this
  is a period of delay during which adolescents can
  experiment with or try on various roles, ideologies and
  commitments
 e.g. Example: “I’m evaluating my beliefs and hope that I
  will be able to decide what’s right for me. I like many of
  the answers provided by my Catholic upbringing, but I’m
  skeptical about some teachings as well. I have been
  looking into Unitarianism to see if it might help me
  answer my questions.”
Identity   achievement (crisis, commitment):
 Example: “After a lot of soul-searching about my
  religion and other religions too, I finally know what
  I believe and what I don’t.”
E. Emotional Development
 Emotion is a feeling or affect that involves
  physiological arousal and, behavioral expression.
  Emotion is closely related to self-esteem. Negative
  emotions such as sadness are associated with low
  self-esteem while positive emotions such as joy
  are linked to high self-esteem.
 Adolescence has long been described as a time of
  emotional turmoil. Young adolescents can be on
  top of the world one moment and down in the
  dumps the next.
            Unit   Four
Theories of cognitive development
The Theory of Jean Piaget (Piaget’s
 Cognitive developmental theory
Cognition     refers to thinking and
 memory processes, and cognitive
 development refers to long-term
 changes in these processes
Piaget    created and studied an
 account of how children and youth
 gradually become able to think
 logically and scientifically.
Piaget maintains that children are
 active participants in their own
 cognitive development.
They      actively    construct  their
 understanding of the world and go
 learning   proceeded by the interplay of
  assimilation (adjusting new experiences to fit
  prior concepts) and accommodation (adjusting
  concepts to fit new experiences).
 After observing children closely, Piaget proposed
  that cognition developed through distinct stages
  from birth through the end of adolescence. By
  stages he meant a sequence of thinking
  patterns with four key features:
1. They always happen in the same order.
2. No stage is ever skipped.
3. Each stage is a significant transformation of
the stage before it.
4. Each later stage incorporated the earlier stages
into itself.
 The process of cognitive development.
• According     to Piaget, children’s cognitive
  development begins with a few basic schemas.
• A Schema is a concept or framework that exists
  in an individual’s mind to identify, organize and
  interpret information.
• Piaget     stated    that   two     psychological
  mechanisms,
• Adaptation.       All organisms adapt to the
  environments in which they must survive, often
  by means of very complex mechanisms
• Assimilation. Assimilation is the process by
  which new objects, events, experiences, or
  information are incorporated into existing
  schemas
Ex.  A child may call a stranger Dadi, for
 him all adults are Dadi
Accommodation.         Accommodation is
 the process by which existing schemas
 are modified and new schemas are
 created to incorporate new objects,
 events, experiences, or information.
 It refers to the process of changing in
 mental structures to handle a new
 experience
E.g will understand the concept Dadi is
 applied only to his father, so the child
 accommodates, meaning he modifies
Organization.       Organization is Piaget’s
 concept of grouping isolated behaviors into a
 higher-order, more smoothly functioning
 cognitive system; the grouping or arranging
 of items into categories.
Equilibration.       Equilibration is a
 mechanism that Piaget Proposed to
 explain how children shift from one
 stage of thought to the next. The shift
 occurs as children experience cognitive
 conflict or disequilibrium in trying to
 understand the world. Eventually, they
 resolve the conflict and reach a
 balance or, equilibrium, of thought.
    Piaget’s Stages of Cognitive Development
Stage 1: The Sensorimotor stage (Birth – 2years).
•   The infants gain an understanding of the world
    through their senses and their motor activities
    (actions or body movements)
•   the intelligence is action rather than of thought,
    and it is confined to objects that are present and
    events that are directly perceived.
•   The child learns to respond to and manipulate
    objects, and to use them in goal-directed
    activity.
•   At   birth,   infants   are   incapable   of
    thought,      and   they   are   unable   to
    differentiate themselves from others or
    from the environment.
•   Living in a world of the here and now,
    they are aware that objects exist only
    when the objects actually can be seen.
•
The    major  achievement      of the
 sensorimotor     period     is    the
 development of object permanence,
 which is the realization that objects
 (including people) continue to exist
 even when they are out of sight. This
 concept develops gradually and is
 complete when the child is able to
 mentally represent objects in their
 absence
Stage 2: The Preoperational stage
(2-7 Years
   a period of rapid development in language. Children
    become increasingly able to represent objects and
    events mentally with words and images
   Now their thinking is no longer restricted to objects
    and events that are directly perceived and present in
    the environment.
    Evidence of representational thought is the child’s
    ability to imitate the behavior of a person who is no
    longer present.
   Other evidence is the Child’s ability to engage in
    imaginary play using one object to stand for another,
Although     children’s thinking is more
 advanced than at the previous stage, it
 is still quit restricted.
Thinking is dominated by perception,
 and the children at this stage exhibit
 egocentrism in thought (the inability
 to distinguish between one’s own
 perspective       and     someone   else’s
 perspective).
They believe that everyone sees what
 they see, thinks as they think, and
 feels as they feel
 Animistic   thinking, believing that inanimate
  objects which have certain characteristics of
  living things are alive and have feelings and
  intentions as well.
 Conservation :not aware that a given quantity
  of matter ( a given number, mass, area, weight,
  or volume of matter) remains the same even if it
  is rearranged or changed in its appearance, as
  long as nothing has been added or taken away.
 Centration is the tendency to focus on only
  one dimension of a stimulus and ignore the
  other dimensions. For example, in the above
  conservation experiment, children focused on
  the tallness of the glass and failed to notice that
  it was also thinner.
 Irreversibility   is the inability to mentally return
  transformed events to its original condition.
  Passing the test suggests the child is at the
  concrete operational stage of thinking.
 Stage 3: The concrete operational Stage (7 –
 11 Years)
• thinking is less egocentric, and they come to
  realize that other people have thoughts and
  feelings that may be different from their own
• attend to two or more dimensions of a stimulus at
  the same time.
• can also understand the concept of reversibility
  ( the realization, during the concrete operations
  stage, that any change occurring in shape, position,
  or order of matter can be returned mentally to its
  original state), which is crucial in problem solving.
 Seriation (a concrete operation that involves ordering
  stimuli along some quantitative dimension, such as
  length, height, weight, age…)
 Basically children achieve conservation by using
  three arguments:
 Identity argument: the child might say, “You haven’t
  added any or taken any way, so it has to be the same.
 The argument of compensation:            They may say
  “This glass is taller here, but the other one is wider
  here, so they are still the same. The changes cancel
  each other out.
 The Argument of inversion: The child might say
  “They are still the same because you can pour this one
  back to what it was before.
 Children are able to apply logical operations only to
  concrete problems; they cannot apply logical
  operations to verbal, abstract, or hypothetical problems
Stage 4:     Formal operational stage (11
& beyond).
   Adolescents can apply reversibility and conservation to
    abstract, idealistic, verbal, or hypothetical situations and
    to problems in the past, present, or future
Piaget’s theory has the following implications of
teaching learning process.
   Take a constructivist approach: children learn best when
    they are active and seek solutions for themselves.
   Facilitate rather than direct learning: Effective teachers
    design situations that allow students to learn by doing.
Consider   the child’s knowledge and
 level of thinking:      Use      ongoing
 assessment
Individually   constructed     meanings
 cannot be measured by standardized
 tests.
Turn the classroom into a setting of
 exploration and discovery:          The
 teachers     should    emphasize      on
 students’ active and self learning
Vygotsky’s Socio-Cultural Cognitive
Theory
Vygotsky  was a Marxist who believed that
 one can only understand human
 beings in the context of the social-
 historical environment.
Vygotsky tried to create a theory that
 allowed for the interplay between the two
 lines of development: the “natural line”
 that emerges from within and the “social-
 historical line” that influences the child
 from without.
 At the age of 38, his life was cut short by
 tuberculosis
Like  Piaget, Vygotsky also believed that
 children actively construct their
 knowledge.
However, Vygotsky gave social interaction
 and culture far more important roles in
 cognitive development than Piaget did.
child’s development as inseparable from
 Social and cultural activities.
 He believed that the development of
 memory,      attention,     and reasoning
 involves learning to use the inventions of
 society, such as language, Mathematical
 systems, and memory strategies.
 Vygotskys     believed    that    children’s     social
  interaction with more skilled adults and peers is
  indispensable in advancing cognitive development.
 The Zone of Proximal Development.                   the
  distance between the actual developmental level as
  determined by independent problem solving and
  the level of potential development as determined
  through problem solving under adult guidance or in
  collaboration with more capable peers.
 the range of tasks too difficult for children to master
  alone but which can be learn with the guidance and
  assistance of adults or more skilled children.
 lower limit of the ZPD is the level of problem solving
  reached by the child working independently.
 The   upper limit is the level of additional
  responsibility the child can accept with the
  assistance of an able instructor.
Scaffolding.     changing the levels of
 support over the course of a teaching
 session in which a more-skilled
 individual (teacher or more advanced
 peer of the child) adjusts the amount of
 guidance to fit the child’s current
 performance level.
When the task the student is learning is
 new, the more skilled person may use
 direct instruction.
As the student’s competence increases,
 less guidance is given.
 Language    and Thought.
 children   use speech not only for social
  communication but also to help them solve tasks.
 He believed that young children use language to
  plan, guide, and monitor their behavior.
 This use of language for self-regulation is called
  private speech.
 For Piaget private speech is egocentric and
  immature, but for Vygotsky it is an
  important tool of thought during the early
  childhood years.
 He emphasized that all mental functions have
  external or social origin.
 Children must use language to communicate with
  others before they can focus inward on their own
  thoughts.
   Children also must communicate externally and use
  language for a long period of time before they can make
  the transition from external to internal speech.
 This transition period occurs between 3 and 7 years of
  age and involves talking to oneself.
 After a while, the self-talk becomes second nature to
  children, and they can act without Verbalizing.
 When this occurs, children have internalized their
  egocentric speech in the form of inner speech, which
  becomes their thoughts (Here Vygotsky said that
  language and thought initially develop independently of
  each other and then merge).
 Vygotsky believed that children who use a lot of private
  speech are more socially competent than those who
  don’t.
 For Vygotsky, when young children talk to themselves,
  they are using language to govern their behavior and
  guide themselves.
 Educational   Implications of Vygotsky’s
 Theory
◦ Use the zone of proximal development: Teaching
  should begin toward the zone’s upper limit, where the
  student is able to reach the goal only through close
  collaboration with the instructor.
◦ Use scaffolding: Use scaffolding to help students move
  to a higher level of skill and knowledge. Offer just
  enough assistance when students need help with self-
  initiated learning activities.
◦ Use more-skilled peers as teachers
◦ Encourage collaborative learning and recognize
  that learning involves a community of learners.
◦ Consider the cultural context of learning:           An
  important function of education is to guide children in
  learning the skills that are important in the culture in
  which they live.
◦ Monitor and encourage children’s use of private
Using    Scaffolding to teach skills
 Apply the principle of scaffolding to help a child
  acquire a particular skill.
 Select a skill the child can potentially acquire with
  some instruction and practice.
 Begin    by providing       direct  guidance and
  instruction, and gradually taper off the amount of
  direct support as the child achieves mastery.
 Afterward, review what you learned.
 Did you provide clear direction at a level the child
  could understand?
 Did you gradually withdraw support to allow the
  child to master the skill increasingly on his or her
  own?
 How might you do things differently in the future?
 4.3. Theory of Moral Development:
 Morality is our judgment or our sense of what is
  right or wrong, goodness or badness, or
  correctness or wrongness for a certain set of
  behaviors.
    Moral development involves age related
  thoughts, behaviors and feelings regarding
  about rules, principles and values that guide
  what people should do.
 The individual’s ability to judge certain action or
  reaction as right or wrong in a dilemma situation
  depends on his/her explaining or reasoning
  ability which is directly related to cognitive
  development
 Morality   has three dimensions:       Cognition,
  emotion and behavior.
 Cognition: refers to thinking or reasoning about
  what to do.
 It describes how children think or reason about
  rules, values, and principles for good or bad
  behavior.
 Emotion: refers to the feelings about what to do
  or what is done.
 it refers to how children feel about the moral
  matters.
 Behavior: refers to what is actually done or how
  children actually behave in moral circumstances.
 Thus,   these moral thoughts, feelings and
  behaviors develop across the lifespan
4.3.1. Kohlberg’s Theory of Moral
Development
 Kohlberg  developed his theory by interviewing
  both children and adolescents by presenting them
  with a series of moral dilemmas; such as Heinz’s
  dilemma
 Kohlberg’s Stages of Moral Development.
  According to Kohlberg, our moral development
  passes through three levels and six stages. These
  levels and stages of moral development by
  Kohlberg are explained as follows.
 Level I. The pre-conventional
 moral reasoning is governed by the standards of
  others rather than an individual’s own
  internalized standards of right and wrong
Stage 1.Punishment and Obedience
Orientation.
morality   is often tied to punishment.
   The physical consequences of an
 action    determine    its   goodness     or
 badness.
“Right”       is      whatever     avoids
 punishment.
Stage     2.          Instrumental       relativist
Orientation.
 “right”   is whatever is rewarded, benefits the
  individual, or results in a favor being returned.
 it   satisfies your personal needs, immediate
  interest, it is right.
 They   assume that everyone has to look out for
  him or herself and is obliged only to those who
  help him or her.
 The   philosophy is one of returning favors “if
  you scratch my back I will scratch yours.”
Level II. The Conventional Level
• individual has internalized the standards
  of others and judges right and wrong in
  terms of those standards.
Stage 3.Interpersonal concordance
Orientation.
reason for doing right is the need to be a
  good person. They value the intentions
  and feelings of others.
A good behavior is that which pleases or
  helps others and is approved by them.
called    the “good boy- “good girl”
  orientation.
Stage     4.       Authority    Maintain
Orientation.
orientation   is toward “authority, fixed
 rules, and the maintenance of the
 social order.
Right   behavior consists of doing one’s
 duty, showing respect for authority,
 and maintaining the given social order
 for its own sake.”
Level III.    The Post conventional
Level
Requires the ability to think at Piaget’s
 level of formal operations.
 people do not simple internalize the
 standards of others.
Instead, they weigh moral alternatives
 realizing that at times the law may
 conflict with basic human rights.
Stage5.Social-contract legalistic Orientation.
 right actions tend to be defined in terms of
  general individual rights and standards that have
  been critically examined and agreed on by the
  whole society.
 They believe that laws and duties should be
  based on promoting the greatest good for the
  greatest number.
 The law is for the people, not on the people.
 It is possible to change the law in terms of
  rational considerations of social utility.
 At stage 5 the person believes that laws are
  formulated to protect both society and the
  individual and should be changed if they fail to do
  so.
 Stage     6.Universal Ethical Principles
  Orientation.
 At this stage, the person defines right or
  wrong in accordance with self-chosen ethical
  principles    that      appeal    to    logical
  comprehensiveness,         universality    and
  consistency.     Ethical decisions are made
  based on universal ethical principles, which
  emphasize respect for human life , justice,
  equality, and dignity for all people. People
  who reason morally at stage 6 believe that
  they must follow their conscience even if it
  results in a violation of the law. Principle of
  justice guide us toward decisions based on
  an equal respect for all.
In  actual practice, Kohlberg said, we
 can reach just decisions by 1ooking at
 a situation through one another’s eyes.
Theoretically, stage 6 has clearer and
 broader    conceptions   of    universal
 principles. But, the interview did not
 draw out this broader understanding.
So, Kohlberg dropped stage 6 from his
 manual, calling it a “theoretical stage’
 and scoring all post-conventional
 responses at stage
Educational   Implications of Kohlberg’s
  Theory
 The following are some of the ways that enables
  teachers to help their students to develop moral
  reasoning ability:
 Teachers should understand that students’
  perspectives on moral issues will vary depending
  on their age group, and then treat accordingly.
 Encourage students to examine all sides of
  moral issues to develop an understanding of the
  many ways in which actions can be interpreted.
 Help    students develop some consistency
  between how they judge other’s actions and how
  they might act themselves.
Foster  concern for the need of others and
 of oneself by creating an atmosphere that
 provides opportunities for cooperative
 interaction, and promote sensitivity for
 the perspectives and feelings of others.
Turn the classroom into a setting of
 exploration and discovery. The teachers
 should      emphasize     students’   own
 exploration and discovery.
During teaching, provide challenging
 activities that require the students’ mind
 to analyze and evaluate the situation
 from different angles.
exercise
A tax-collector threatens the tax-payer
 with a very high rate. That is, the tax-
 payer was asked to pay more than he
 could. But the tax-payer could not
 afford to pay what the tax-collector
 claimed. So, the taxpayer and tax-
 collector made agreement to reduce
 the rate where by the tax-collector got
 personal gifts from the tax-payer, so
 that they had nothing to lose on that
 score. Were the tax-payer and tax-
 collector right in doing that? Why?
                       Unit five
              5. Personality development
Definition   of Personality
A sum total of the unique characteristics
 of an individual that differentiates him or
 herself from others and is persistent over
 time and situations.
an integration/organization of behaviors;
 represents the identity of an individual and
 it is your psychological name.
Temperament- an individual’s behavioral
 style and characteristic way of responding
 and it is the foundation of personality.
   Increased capacities and interactions with the environment,
    temperament evolves or becomes elaborated across childhood
    to adolescence into a set of personality traits
   Changing personality is difficult because:
   The personality type established during childhood maintained
    with a few modification at adolescence and the remaining life.
    The change is more of quantitative than qualitative.
   Molding/detail features of the personality is mostly not within
    the individual but the environment;           so to change the
    personality    the   adolescent   should     leave   that   familiar
    environment.
   Conditions Influencing the Adolescents’ Self-concept
   Age of maturing: Early matures, who are treated as near
    adults develop favorable self-concepts and thus makes good
    adjustments. Late matures, who are treated like children,
    feel misunderstood and a victim and thus are predisposed to
    maladjusted behaviors.
   Appearance: Being different in appearance makes the
    adolescent feel inferior. Any physical defect is a source of
    embarrassment which leads to feelings of inferiority. Physical
    attractiveness, by contrast, leads to favorable judgments
    about   personality   characteristics   and   this   aids   social
    acceptance.
Sex   appropriateness:      Sex    appropriate
 appearance,   interests   and   behavior   help
 adolescents achieve favorable self-concept.
 Sex   inappropriateness   makes    them    self-
 conscious and this influences their behavior
 unfavorably
Names    and nicknames: Adolescents are
 sensitive and embarrassed if members of the
 peer group judge their names unfavorably or if
 they have nicknames that imply ridicule.
   Family relationships: An adolescent who has a very
    close relationship with a family member will identify
    with this person and want to develop a similar
    personality pattern. If this person is of the same sex,
    the adolescent will be helped to develop a sex-
    appropriate self-concept.
   Peers: Pears influence the adolescent’s personality
    pattern   in   two   ways.   First,   the   self-concepts   of
    adolescents are reflections of what they believe their
    peers’ concepts of them are and, second, they come
    under peer pressures to develop personality traits
    approved by the group.
Creativity:
Adolescents   who have been encouraged to be
 creative in their play and academic work as
 children develop a feeling of individuality and
 identity that has a favorable effect on their
 elf-concepts.
By   contrast, adolescents who have been
 forced to conform to an approved pattern
 since earliest childhood lack a feeling of
 identity and of individuality.
 Levels    of aspiration:
 If   adolescents have unrealistically high levels of
  aspiration, they will experience failure. This will
  lead to feelings of inadequacy and to defensive
  reactions in which they blame others for their
  failures.
 Adolescents      who    are   realistic   about   their
  abilities will experience more successes than
  failures. This will lead to greater self-confidence
  and self-satisfaction, both of which contribute to
  better self-concepts.
5.2Theories of Personality Development
 Issues     of      difference between
 psychologists on pty
      1. what qualities are important in
 personality
        description,
    2. how they develop and
    3. what determines them
 Theories try to answer why people
 differ in their personality and how
 personality develops.
Psychosexual Theories of Pty Development
developed  by Sigmund Freud
personality is the result of the mental
 functioning of an individual.
Basic Concepts of Freud’s Theory
 1. Levels of Consciousness (or Mind)
A.   conscious     mind:Represents those
  mental experiences that we are fully
  aware of at a given moment.
• For instance, what are you doing just at
 this moment? Reading, learning, or
 whatever you are doing will be your
 responses.
B. Subconscious (preconscious)
mind:
experience which we are not immediately
aware but that can easily be brought to
awareness.
it consists of feeling and memories that we are
unaware of at the moment but can become
aware of with effort.
It consists of experiences which are sometimes
conscious or known and sometimes not known
A. unconscious mind:
 totally unaware, largest, darkest and inaccessible part
  of our mind which consists of threatening and painful
  thoughts, wishes and feelings.
 According to Freud the forgotten memories are put in
  the unconscious mind.
 It is the primary source of the powerful sexual and
  aggressive energies [instincts] which are the major
  motivators of our behavior.
 Freud argued that the unconscious was the repository
  of our primary and most primitive motives.
 This repository, however is not simply a passive
  container, but with biologically derived energy (libido)
  constantly seeking release.
 If an appropriate occasion for such release occurs,
  energy may be expended; the pressure is temporarily
  reduced, and the reduction is felt as reinforcement .
2. Structure of Personality
 They are theoretical constructs; they do not physically
  exist within the brain.
 They are functions, rather than, structures of personality
 They are understood in terms of actions.
A. Id (primitive, pleasure seeking impulse).
 It is the primary reservoir of psychic energy [libido] which
  is the dynamic source of all motivations
 Present at birth
 unconscious; it has no contact with reality.
 Operates on the “pleasure principle” (I want it, and I want
  it now), in which the goal is the immediate reduction of
  tension and the maximization of satisfaction. It does not
  tolerate delays in need satisfaction.
 Our “dark side” or animalistic nature, Selfish
 It is the biological aspect of our personality
B. The Ego [Rational self]
 Develops when children start experiencing the
  demands and constraints of reality [the rules and
  regulation of society]
 it is representative of the external world.
 Created to facilitate satisfaction of id desires
  realistically.
 Serves as a mediator between the id, reality and
  superego.
 Operates according to the reality principle.
 This principle postpones the discharge of energy
  until an appropriate situation or object in the real
  world appears. Hence, it is called the “executive
  branches of personality” because it uses reasoning
  to make decisions. It is the psychological aspect of
  our personality
 the id and the ego have no morality.
C. The Superegos (Internalized values of
society)
 The    final personality structure to develop.
 It   expects the child to be non-selfish, social and
  morally perfect. So it works on perfection principle.
 Represents     the values of parents and society [it is
  the moral branches of personality].
 It   strives for ideal rather than the real.
 It   is governed by morality principle. Therefore, it
  judges whether something is right or wrong.
 It   is the social or cultural aspect of our personal
It   has two parts;
The     conscience- prevents us from
 doing something which is morally bad.
   The ego- ideal-motivates us to do
 what is morally good.
 Example
A     six-year-old child Bereket spots his favorite
 candy in a supermarket.
 The   id shouts - "I want it now! Take it!"
 The   super ego - "Thou shall not steal."
 The   ego - "I could ask my father Girma to buy it
 for
 me,   but he might say no."
3. The Development of Personality
 the   first five years of life were crucial in
  determining personality
 personality     develops    through    stages. as
  psychosexual stages of personality development.
  because they are concerned with the psychological
  manifestation of the sexual [pleasure] drive.
 At each stage, we experience pleasure in one part
  of the body more than others.
 our adult personality is determined by the way we
  resolve conflicts between these early sources of
  pleasure- namely the mouth, the anus and the
  genitals- collectively known as erogenous zones.
 When   these conflicts are not resolved, the person
  may be fixated at a particular stage of
  development.
 Fixation occurs when the person remains locked in
  an earlier developmental stage because needs are
  under or over gratified.
1. The oral stage [Birth- 18 months]
 The erogenous zone is the mouth
 Freud sucking pleasure in its own right.
 Infants get pleasure by stimulating the mouth area.
  Chewing, sucking and biting are the chief sources of
  pleasure.
 The major developmental task is weaning from
  nipple or bottle
 Oral fixations may result such habits as thumb
  sucking, fingernail biting, chewing, smoking,
  drinking, etc…
2. The Anal stage[18 months- 3 years]
 The erogenous zone is the anus
 Pleasure mainly come from activities such as
  holding in or letting go the faces and urine and
  playing with one’s own dirt
 The major developmental task is toilet training
 The main conflict lies on toilet training with the id
  dominated child.
 The child wants immediate pleasure from anal
  activities; whereas the parents want to control
  the child to seat neat and clean and they insist “
  do as we say”
 Anal fixations may result in extreme orderliness,
  cleanliness,      conformist,       pedantic       or
  disorderliness, messiness, extravagant, etc…
C. The phallic stage [3- 5 years]
The erogenous zone is genitals (immature
 sex organs)
Children      get      pleasure      through
 manipulation, touching of their genitals (sex
 organs). Young children at this stage feel a
 sexual desire for the opposite sex parent
Both sexes give high value on the penis
Boys    engage in distance competing
 urination
It is the most crucial stage of personality
 development during which the Oedipus
 complex and Electra complex appear.
 Oedipus    complex: is derived from the Greek
  legend in which the king Oedipus kills his father
  and marries his mother.
 It refers to the young child’s unconscious
  and intense wishes to have and enjoy the
  affection of his mother by eliminating his
  father.
 So this tendency of the boy between 3_5 years
  to want to fully possess his mother and get rid
  of his father is called Oedipus complex.
 However, the child realizes father is stronger,
  and fears a revenge for all his fantasies and
  wishes. His fear focus on his most valued object,
  his penis. So he suffers from castration
  anxiety.
   Electra complex:
   young child’s intense sexual desire to have and enjoy with her father.
   The girl loves her father and want to marry him by get rid of her
    mother.
   The girl also suffers from penis envy.
   She blames her mother for her apparent loss of penis/ penis envy- the
    counter part of castration anxiety/
   Gradually, due to fear of castration anxiety [the boy] and loss of her
    mother’s love [the girl] the children resolve these dangerous
    tendencies by repressing all of their wishes into the unconscious and
    by identifying themselves with the same- sex parent.
   fixations at this stage may result: vanity, recklessness; the boy worries
    about the size of his penis, he may be attracted to or get a girl friend or
    a wife who resembles his mother or may marry an old woman above
    his age.
4. The Latency Period [ 5- 11 years]
There is no new erogenous zone (the
 structure of personality is already
 formed).
Sexual instincts will go underground or
 become latent or hidden by keeping
 down firmly in the unconscious.
Mostly engage in similar sex play.
The child’s interest shifts to school
 work and other social activities. Hence,
 children’s repress all sexual interests
 and develop social and academic skills.
5. The Genital Stage [from puberty onwards]
 The  active sources of pleasure is the opposite sex
 There is mature genitals and mature sexual intimacy
 Libido is again focused in genital area but now is
  directed toward heterosexual rather than autoerotic
  [masturbatory] pleasure.
 Adolescents get pleasure from sexual intercourse
  with the opposite sex.
 Successful resolution of the conflicts leads to the
  development of “normal” life, and genuine
  heterosexual relationships. Freud said that from
  puberty onwards the individual’s great task is freeing
  him/herself from parents. Successful development at
  earlier stages leads to marriage, mature sexuality,
  birth and rearing of children.
2.Psychosocial Theories of Pty Development
Erikson  develop theory of social development
 that relies on stages through series of
 psychosocial crises (turning points in a
 person’s relationships and feelings about
 himself or herself)
Each crisis consists of a dilemma or choice that
 carries both advantages and risks, but in which
 one choice or alternative is normally
 considered more desirable or “healthy”.
How one crisis is resolved affects how later
 crises are resolved.
The resolution also helps to create an
 individual’s developing personality.
Erik Erikson: Eight psychosocial crises of
development
 1. Trust and mistrust(Birth to 1 year): from the day
 they are born, infants face a crisis
• They are happiest if they can eat, sleep, and excrete
   according to their own physiological schedules,
   regardless of whether their schedules are
   convenient for the caregiver (often the mother).
• It is as if the baby asks, “If I demand food (or sleep
   or a clean diaper) now, will my mother actually be
   able to help me meet this need?”
• Hopefully, between the two of them, mother and
   child resolve this choice in favor of the baby's trust:
   the mother proves herself at least “good enough” in
   her attentiveness, and the baby risks trusting
   mother's motivation and skill at care giving.
2. Autonomy and shame(1-3)
 Development of control over bodily functions
  and activities
the   child’s lack of experience in these activities,
 however, self-care is risky at first—the toddler may feed
 (or toilet or dress) clumsily and ineffectively.
The child’s caregiver, for her part, risks overprotecting
 the child and criticizing his early efforts unnecessarily
 and thus causing the child to feel shame for even trying.
Hopefully, as with the earlier crisis of trust, the new
 crisis gets resolved in favor of autonomy through the
 combined efforts of the child to exercise autonomy and
 of the caregiver to support the child’s efforts
Initiative    Age 3-   Testing   limits   of   self-
and guilt     6        assertion                and
                       purposefulness
Industry      Age 6-   Development of sense       of
and           12       mastery and competence
inferiority
Identity      Age      Development of identity and
and role      12-18    acknowledge of identity by
confusion              others
Intimacy      Age      Formation     of    intimate
and           18-35    relationships            and
isolation              commitments
Generativity          and   stagnation(Age
 35-60)
Development      of   creative     or    productive
 activities    that    contribute        to   future
 generations
Integrity     and despair(Age 60+)
Acceptance     of personal life history and
 forgiveness of self and others
                    Unit seven
               Concept of learning
         7.1.1 Definitions of Learning
 The process by which a relatively lasting
  change in potential behavior occurs because of
  practice or experience.
 Learning is also a process of acquiring
  modifications in existing knowledge, skills,
  habits, or tendencies through experience,
  practice, or exercise.
 attributes of learning...
 The first is that learning is permanent change
  in behavior.
 It does not include change due to illness,
  fatigue, maturation and use of intoxicant.
The learning is not directly observable but
 manifests in the activities of the individual.
Learning    depends      on     practice   and
 experience
Yoakum     &   Simpson    have    stated   the
 following general characteristics of learning:
Learning   is growth, adjustment, organization
 of experience, purposeful, both individual
 and social, product of the environment.
Factors affecting learning
         Factors associated with the learners
 maturation,    heredity,   physical   and    home
 conditions, interest, attention and perception as
 well as attitude, learning activities, organization
 effect, level of processing and interference effect.
         Factors related to the teacher
 the    organization and presentation of learning
 materials, guidance and testing.
    Factors related to the subject
    matter
Some   of the factors that are associated
with the subject matter of learning are
transfer and serial position effect
THEORIES OF LEARNING
BEHAVIORIST LEARNING THEORIES
Focuses       on    changes     in
 individuals’ observable behaviors,
 changes in what people say or do
1.PAVLOV-CLASSICAL CONDITIONING
 Respondent conditioning
 Focuses on involuntary responses to particular sights,
  sounds, or other sensations
 Pavlov trained his dogs to salivate when they heard a
  bell ring
 classical conditioning components
 Unconditioned Stimulus : anything, which can
  evoke a response without prior learning or
  conditioning.
 For example, when a dog eats some food it causes his
  mouth to salivate. Therefore the food is an
  unconditioned stimulus, because it causes a reflex
  response (salivation) automatically and without the
  dog having to learn how to salivate. It causes an
  automatic reflex response
• Unconditioned   means   “unlearned”   or   “naturally
  occurring.”
Unconditioned       response (UCR): A
 response that is natural and needs no
 training (e.g., salivation at the smell of
 food).
 Conditioned   stimulus (CS): A once neutral
  stimulus that has been paired with an
  unconditioned stimulus to bring about a
  response formerly caused only by the
  unconditioned stimulus.
 Conditioned response (CR): A response
  that, after conditioning, follows a previously
  neutral stimulus (e.g., salivation at the ringing
  of a bell)
positive   changes in students’ attitudes
  and feelings attitudes like a love for
  learning, for example, and feelings like
  self-confidence. It turns out that
  respondent       conditioning  describes
  these kinds of changes relatively well
Before Conditioning:
(UCS) Seeing Teacher Smile → Student Smiles (UR)
(UCS) Seeing Classroom → No response (UR)
During Conditioning:
Seeing Teaching Smile + Seeing Classroom →
Student Smiles
After Conditioning:
  principles of classical conditioning,
 Extinction:     the disappearance of a link
  between the conditioned stimulus and the
  conditioned response.
 In other words, it refers to the disappearance of
  conditioned response over time when the
  conditioned stimulus is no longer presented
 Generalization the tendency for similar stimuli
  to elicit a conditioned response.
 The child being conditioned to your smile, for
  example, might learn to associate your smile
  not only with being present in your classroom,
  but also to being present in other, similar
Discrimination         : the tendency to stop
 making a generalized response to a stimulus that
 is similar to the original conditioned stimulus
 because the similar stimulus is never paired with
 the unconditioned stimulus.
 Example, the dog salivates only in
 response to the dinner bell instead of
 the doorbell or the telephone bell.
Spontaneous    recovery – the reappearance of a
 learned response after extinction has occurred.
Higher     order conditioning: when a
 neutral     stimulus       can     cause      the
 conditioned response sense if it had
 been associated with the conditioned
 stimulus.
 Types of classical conditioning
Forward   conditioning: Learning is fastest in
 forward conditioning.
the onset of the conditioned stimulus (CS)
 precedes the onset of the unconditioned
 stimulus (US). Two common forms of forward
 conditioning are delay and trace conditioning.
Delay conditioning: In delay conditioning,
 the conditioned stimulus (CS) is presented
 and is overlapped by the presentation of the
 unconditioned stimulus (US).
For example the bell is rung untilthe food is
brought to the dogs
Trace    conditioning: the conditioned
 stimulus (CS) and the unconditioned
 stimulus (US) do not overlap.
Instead, the conditioned stimulus (CS) is
 presented; a period is allowed to elapse
 during which no stimuli are presented, and
 then the unconditioned stimulus (US) is
 presented.
The stimulus-free period is called the trace
 interval. It may also be called the
 conditioning interval
For instance the bell comes on then goes
 off for a fixed amount of time before the
 meat was delivered. Traffic light car stop
Simultaneous       conditioning:  the
 conditioned     stimulus    (CS)  and
 unconditioned     stimulus   (US) are
 presented and terminated at the same
 time.
For instance the bell andthe food are
 brought at the same time
Backward conditioning: conditional
 stimulus (CS) immediately follows an
 unconditional stimulus (US).
Ucs presented before cs.
Implications of Pavlov’s Theory to Classroom
Situations
student   needs to be able to respond to
 a particular stimulus (information)
 before s/he can be associated with a
 new one
Teachers should know how to motivate
 their students to learn
Most of the emotional responses can
 be      learned     through     classical
 conditioning
Generalization explains the transfer of
E.L Thorndike- trial & error theory
 According    to Thorndike, all learning takes place
    because of formation of bond or connection
    between stimulus and response
 He   further says that learning takes place through
    a process of approximation and correction.
    A person makes a number of trials, some
    responses do not give satisfaction to the individual
    but he goes on making further trials until he gets
    satisfactory responses.
 Thorndike's     connectionism is typically referred
    to as a behaviorist theory, it differs from
    classical conditioning in two major ways.
 First,Thorndike     was     interested   in   mental
    processes,     and   he     designed    his   first
    experiments to address the thought processes
    of animals.
    Second, instead of reflex or involuntary
    reactions, Thorndike researched voluntary or
    self-directed behaviors
 Laws of Learning
     1. Law of Readiness
 refers to the fact that learning takes place only
  when the learner is prepared to learn.
 mental preparation for action.
 Learning failures are the result of forcing the
  learner to learn when he is not ready to learn
  something.
 No amount of efforts can make the child learn if
  the child is not ready to learn.
 The dictum that ‘you can lead a horse to the
  pond but you can’t make it drink water unless it
  feels thirsty’ goes very well with this law.
In  other words, if the child is ready to learn,
 he/she learns more quickly, effectively and
 with greater satisfaction than if s/he is not
 ready to learn.
first, if there is a preference to act and
 people want to do it, they will be satisfied.
 In consequence, they will do not act other
 behavior, and it will result unsatisfied.
Second, if there is inclination to act, but
 people do want to do that, they will replace
 with other action to lack of their unsatisfied.
third if there is no tendency to act, but
 people are forced to do that, it will result
 unsatisfied.
Educational   Implications of Law of
 Readiness:
The law draws the attention of teacher
 to the motivation of the child.
The teacher must consider the psycho-
 biological readiness of the students to
 ensure successful learning experiences.
 Curriculum / Learning experiences
 should be according to the mental level
 of maturity of the child.
If this is not so, there will be poor
 comprehension and readiness may
 evaporate.
    2. Law of Exercise
 learning    becomes efficient through practice or
  exercise.
 The dictum ‘Practice makes a man perfect’ goes
  very well with this law.
   repetition of the experience increases the chances of a
    correct response. However, repetition does not enhance
    learning
   unless a satisfying state of affairs follows the response
 This law is further split into two parts —
 The law of use means that a connection
  between a stimulus and response is strengthened
  by its occurrence, its exercise or its use.
 the use of any response strengthens it, and
  makes it more prompt, easy and certain.
 the   law   of   disuse,   said   that   when   a
 modifiable connection is not made between a
 stimulus and a response over a length of time,
 the strength of that connection is decreased.
 Law   of Use; that is connections between
 condition and action can be strong if there is
 an exercise. Second is The Law of Disue; that
 is connections between condition and action
 can be weak if the exercise is stopped
Educational     Implications
 law of effect is happened to someone's who gives
  punishment or reward . However, in education the
  thing that can give the reward will be more effective
  than a punishment.
Exercise occupies an important place in learning.
  Teacher must repeat, give sufficient drill in some
  subjects like mathematics, drawing, music or
  vocabulary for fixing material in the minds of the
  students.
Thorndike later revised this law of exercise and
  accordingly it is accepted that practice does bring
  improvement in learning but it in itself is not
  sufficient.
Always practice must be followed by some reward or
  satisfaction to the learner. The learner must be
  motivated to learn
        Law of Effect
   state that when a connection between stimulus and
    response is accompanied by satisfying state, its strength
    is increased.
   On the other hand, when a connection is accompanied by
    an annoying state of affairs, its strength is reduced or
    weakened.
   The saying ‘nothing succeeds like success’ goes very well
    with this law.
   In other words, the responses that produce satisfaction or
    comfort for the learner are strengthened and responses
    that produce annoyance or discomfort for the learner are
    weakened.
   Thorndike revised this law in 1930 and according to this
    revision, he stated that reward strengthened the response
    but punishment did not always weaken the response.
   Then he placed more emphasis on the reward aspect than
    on the punishment aspect of Law of Effect.
Educational   Implications
This law signifies the use of reinforcement
 or feedback in learning.
This implies that learning trials must be
 associated with satisfying consequences.
   The teacher can use rewards to
 strengthen     certain    responses     and
 punishment to weaken others.
However, the use of reward is more
 desirable than the use of punishment in
 school learning.
The teacher for motivating the students for
 learning situations can exploit the use of
 reward.
B.F Skinner- Operant Conditioning
Operant  conditioning (sometimes referred s
 instrumental conditioning) is a method of
 learning that occurs through rewards and
 punishments for behavior.
Through operant conditioning, an association
 is made between a behavior and a
 consequence for that behavior
Skinner believed that internal thoughts and
 motivations could not be used to explain
 behavior. Instead, he suggested, we should
 look only at the external, observable causes
 of human behavior. Skinner used the term
 operant to refer to any "active behavior that
Skinner is regarded as the father of Operant
 Conditioning, but his work was based on
 Thorndike’s law of effect. Skinner introduced
 a new term into the Law of Effect -
 Reinforcement. Behavior that is reinforced
 tends to be repeated (i.e. strengthened);
 behavior that is not reinforced tends to die
 out-or be extinguished (i.e. weakened).
Skinner     identified    three   types    of
 responses or operant that can follow
 behavior.
Neutral operants: Responses from the
 environment that neither increase nor
 decrease the probability of a behavior being
 repeated.
1. Positive reinforces are favorable events or outcomes that are
presented after the behavior. a response or behavior is
strengthened by the addition of something, such as praise or a
direct reward.
2. Negative reinforces involve the removal of an unfavorable
events or outcomes after the display of a behavior. In these
situations, a response is strengthened by the removal of something
considered unpleasant.
 In both of these cases of reinforcement, the behavior increases.
• Punishment is the presentation of an adverse event or outcome
that causes a decrease in the behavior it follows. Punishment
weakens behavior. There are two kinds of punishment:
1. Positive punishment sometimes referred to as punishment by
application, involves the presentation of an unfavorable event or
outcome in order to weaken the response it follows.
2. Negative punishment, also known as punishment by removal,
occurs when a favorable event or outcome is removed after a
behavior occurs. In both of these cases of punishment, the
behavior decreases.
 There   are two types of reinforcement schedule. These
  are: Continuous reinforcement - reinforcement is
  given every time the animal gives the desired response.
 Intermittent reinforcement - reinforcement is given
  only part of the times the animal gives the desired
  response.
 Partial or intermittent reinforcement schedule can be
  classified in to two. These are:
 Ratio reinforcement - a pre-determined proportion of
  responses will be reinforced.
  Fixed ratio reinforcement - reinforcement is given on
  a regular ratio, such as every fifth time the desired
  behavior is produced.
  Variable        (random)       ratio   reinforcement-
  reinforcement is given for a predetermined proportion of
  responses, but randomly instead of on a fixed schedule.
 ◦ Interval reinforcement- reinforcement is
   given after a predetermined period of time.
 ◦ Fixed     interval     reinforcement       -
   reinforcement is given on a regular
   schedule, such as every five minutes.
 ◦ Variable     interval   reinforcement      -
   reinforcement is given after random
   amounts of time have passed.
In  animal studies, Skinner found that
 continuous reinforcement in the early
 stages of training seems to increase
 the rate of learning. Later, intermittent
 reinforcement keeps the response
 going longer and slows extinction.
 Contribution      of the theory of Operant
  Conditioning for the Classroom Instruction
 Operant conditioning can help us solving problems
  that we might face in our daily life by focusing on
  the formation of habits, breaking bad-habits, etc.
 Accordingly, operant conditioning is applied for
  developing motivation to the learners in classroom
  condition, reinforcers such as praise, grades, etc.
  should be used. This means desired behaviors are
  encouraged by reinforcement while undesired
  behaviors are punished.
 Thought it may be impossible to reinforce all
  desirable behavior, when we decide that a certain
  behavior is critical, reinforce immediately i.e. do
  not let time elapse. Thus, teachers should be alert
  to timing of reinforcement.
Exercise: identify schedule of
reinforcement
  1. Piecework is the practice of varying the
  worker's pay according to how much the
  worker does.
  2. In agricultural harvesting, fruit pickers are
  usually paid by the box, and so they pick fast
  in order to get more money. On some
  construction projects, workers are paid
  according to how many loads of bricks are
  laid, or how many houses are framed. In the
  clothing industry, some workers are paid by
  how many pieces of clothing are sewn.
3. gambling ,commission sale
4. Imagine that you write a novel, then
send it to a book publisher. It is rejected
by the first publisher, so you send it to
another, and it is rejected there too.
Finally, you try a third publisher, and
this time it is accepted for publication.
You receive a royalty contract, a large
monetary advance, and invitations from
talk shows
5. Daily wage ,monthly salary
6. Fishing, beggar, Getting through on
the phone
Social cognitive approaches to
learning
 Albert Bandura is the main architect of social
  cognitive theory.
 states that social and cognitive factors, as well
  as behavior, play important roles in learning.
 Cognitive factors might involve the student’s
  expectations for success;
 social   factors    might   include    students’
  observing their parents’ achievement behavior
 He says that when students learn, they can
  cognitively represent or transform their
  experiences.
Bandura      developed    a    reciprocal
 determinism model that consists of three
 main factors: behavior, person/cognitive,
 and environment
In      Bandura’s    learning     model,
 person/cognitive factors play important
 roles.
The person/cognitive factor that Bandura
 has emphasized the most in recent years
 is self-efficacy,
the belief that one can master a
 situation and produce positive outcomes.
An   individual's belief in his or her
 capacity to execute behaviours
 necessary      to    produce     specific
 performance attainments
Self-efficacy reflects confidence in the
 ability to exert control over one's own
 motivation,    behaviour,    and    social
 environment
For example, a student who has low
 self-efficacy might not even try to study
 for a test because he doesn’t believe it
 will do him any good
A   more permanent impression is made on
  students not by telling them what to do, but by
  setting an example for them.
 Teachers should be models as much as possible
  since their behavior can be a powerful
  motivating force for student behavior.
 Observation of a model can produce significant
  changes in your students’ behavior. Among
  these are the following:
(a) an observer may acquire new responses;
(b) observing models may strengthen or weaken
existing responses;
(c) observing models may cue the appearance of
apparently forgotten responses.
There   are four major sources of
 information available to students
1. Performance accomplishments.
   Bandura states that we acquire
   personal and effective information
   from what we do.
Students     learn    from     first‑hand
 experiences how successful they are in
 mastering classroom challenges.
.    Vicarious experience.          This is
Bandura’s     expression    for    watching
“similar others” perform.
If   others     can   perform     a    task
  successfully, students usually feel more
  optimistic    when     they     begin.
  Unfortunately, the opposite is also true.
Verbal    persuasion. Here Bandura means
 that students can be led, through persuasion,
 into believing that they can overcome any
 difficulties and improve their performance.
If you, as the instructor, are respected and
 admired by students, then your suggestions
 become a potent influence on your students’
 behavior.
 Emotional arousal. stressful situations
 constitute a source of personal information.
 If students see themselves as incompetent
 and fearful in certain situations and with
 certain subjects, then the possibility of that
 fearful behavior appearing is improved
Observational    learning is learning that
 involves acquiring skills, strategies, and
 beliefs by observing others.
Processes in Observational Learning
Bandura (1986) describes four key processes
Attention. Before students can produce a
 model’s actions, they must attend to what the
 model is doing or saying
Retention. To reproduce a model’s actions,
 students must code the information and keep
 it in memory so that they retrieve it.
Production:     to reproduce the model’s
 behavior
Motivation
MOTIVATION FOR LEARNING
Motivation is an internal state that arouses us
 to action, pushes us in particular directions,
 and keeps us engaged in certain activities.
Motivation appears to affect learning and
 performance in at least four ways:
 ◦ Motivation increases an individual’s energy and
   activity level
 ◦ Motivation directs an individual toward certain
   goals
 ◦ Motivation promotes initiation of certain activities
   and persistence in those activities.
 ◦ Motivation affects the learning strategies and
   cognitive processes an individual employ (Dweck&
     Types of Motivation
Intrinsic  Motivation: Is an internal
 force or motive within the individual
 which propels him/her into emitting
 certain behavior
Extrinsic Motivation: Is the external
 or environmental factor, which sets the
 individual’s behavior into motion. The
 incentive/reinforcer drives an
 individual’s behavior towards a goal.
Theories of Motivation
Maslow’s  Needs Hierarchy and its Application in
 the Classroom
a deficit in any one need category will affect
 student performance.
Hungry students, for example, usually are not
 scholars; their hunger overwhelms all other
 concerns.
Similarly, fearful students (for whatever reason)
 may find it difficult to concentrate on their studies.
 Those students who feel rejected and isolated may
 refuse to participate fully in your class activities.
 Students and all of us need to feel that we are
 worthy of respect, both from ourselves and others,
 a respect that is based on actual achievement.
Bruner and Discovery of Learning in
the Classroom
any     attempt to improve education
 inevitably begins with the motives for
 learning
the goal of discovery learning is to have
 students use their information in solving
 problems in many different circumstances
individuals behave according to their
 perceptions of their environment. i.e
 students see meaning in knowledge,
 skills,    and  attitudes   when     they
 themselves discover it.
Bruner  believed that the most effective
 way to develop a coding system is to
 discover it rather than being told by the
 teacher.
The    concept of discovery learning
 implies that students construct their own
 knowledge for themselves (also known
 as a constructivist approach
Bruner noted that knowledge of results
 (feedback, reinforcement) is valuable if
 it comes when learners compare their
 results with what they attempt to
 achieve
Classroom Implications of Theory of Motivation
Itis important for the teacher to know
 the basic needs of his/her students
When the teacher praises his/her
 students for doing well in their study or
 assignment, they will be urging to
 sustain that effort.
        Transfer of learning
 The ability of the individual to apply the previous
 experience on the new related experience
When picking up a new language (like German)
 after one has already learned English, similar
 words will be learned most easily.
New    stimulus (German) Old response (English)
        Mann                        Man
 types of transfer of learning
 Positive Transfer: This is a situation whereby a
  previously learnt fact or information aids in the
  understanding of a new task. Aside from aiding the
  learners in their subsequent learning, it also helps
  the learners to learn better and effectively the new
  task.
Negative    Transfer: This is a type of
 learning in which prior experience
 imparts negatively on the new one. In
 this case, the understanding of past
 skills inhibits the mastering of new
 ones. For example, if a student wrongly
 connects information, it can lead to
 negative transfer
Zero Transfer: This type of learning
 reveals no link between the previously
 learnt task and the recent one. The
 evidence of zero transfer is hardly seen,
 it reveals no clear positive or negative
Theories of Transfer of Learning
A. Theory of Mental Faculties:
The basic tenet of the theory is that human
  mind is sub-divided into different powers of
  faculties like memory, judgment, reasoning or
  thinking.
each of these faculties is reinforced and
  developed      by    actors  and     continuous
  memorization of poetry/poem and similar
  works.
This theory believes that exercises and regular
  practice will strengthen the mental faculties.
well-trained and disciplined mind is the
  ingredient needed for understanding of
  new information.
B. Theory of Identical Elements:
it is possible for an individual to transfer the
 prior skills and knowledge to recent ones
 because both experiences are identical
 (share things in common).
a successful or effective learning will happen
 if there are connections or interrelatedness
 between the old and the new experiences.
For example, it is expected that a student
 who has learnt about anatomical parts of
 human being in a Biology lesson, should be
 able to do well when he/she is asked to
 name anatomical parts of a goat during
 Agriculture lesson.
C. Theory of Generalization:
The assumption of the theory is that
 general principles aid transfer of
 learning better than segregated facts.
This theory believes in Gestalt, an
 assertion which views learning from a
 whole or complete form rather than in
 isolated form.
For     example,     the     theory    of
 generalization indicates that a learnt
 experience should be useful in other
 day-to –day related activities.
Classroom  Implications of Transfer
 of Learning
The   teacher should know that transfer of
 learning will not take place when both the old
 and new are unrelated.
The    teacher    should    provide   the
 opportunity for his/her students to
 practice    a    subject-matter     being
 discussed along with him/her.
For a transfer of learning to take place,
 the teacher should always emphasize
 the relationship that exists between one
 subject matter and another
          Memory in learning
Memory is the special ability of our
 mind to store when we learn
 something to recollect & reproduce it
 after some time.
Memory     is the complex process
 involving learning, retention, recall &
 recognition.
The experiences which we undergo,
 leaves traces in our minds in the form
 of ‘Schemas’.
The length of our retention depends on
 Processes of memory
     Memory process is the mental activities we perform to
   put information into memory, to keep it and to make use
   of it latter.
 1. Encoding - It is the process by which information is
   initially recorded in a form usable to memory.
       It is also the initial perception and registration of
information
2. Storage –Storage is the persistence of information in
memory.
 holding of information for some period of time.
 The process of putting coded information into memory
3. Retrieval - getting information that is in storage into a
form that can be used.
 Recovery of stored information
 Types of Memory
1. Episodic Memory
It deals with episodes or events that
 happen in your life or take place in
 your presence.
For example, can you remember a
 particularly happy birthday and the
 presents you received? Or can you
 remember the emotions you felt when
 you moved house? These memories
 are stored as episodic memory.
2. Semantic Memory
It   deals    with  more   generalized
 knowledge or memory.
Semantics has to do with the meanings
 of words or things.
You know that the height of Mount
 Everest is 8854 meters, even though it
 is doubtful that you have been there.
 The fact that 8854 meters is nearly 9
 kilometers also means something. You
 can    remember      how    to   spell
 ‘psychology’, and you know something
 of what the word means.
3. Procedural Memory
procedural memory, sometimes known as
 skill memory.
This involves knowledge of how you do
 something.
You have both learnt and remembered
 these skills in lots of ways.
These memories tend to last a long time.
 Your tennis may get quite rusty if you have
 not played for some years, but the minute
 you pick up a racquet again you will
 remember how to hit the ball.
Riding your bicycle is another example of
 procedural memory
stages of memory
Sensory Memory/sensory registor
 the  entry way to memory
 acts as a holding bin, retaining information until
  we can select items for attention from the
  stream of stimuli bombarding our senses.
 It gives us a brief time to decide whether
  information is extraneous or important large-
  capacity storage
 Duration less than 1 second visual sensory
  memory), to as long as 2 seconds or more (in
  the case of auditory sensory memory
 iconic memory (visual sensory memory) and
 echoic memory (auditory sensory memory).
The type of data is raw, unprocessed
        4.3.2. short term /working memory
 set of processes that we use to hold and
  rehearse information that occupies our
  current awareness.
 duration of short-term memory is very brief
  not more than 30 seconds.
 Storage capacity of working memory is
  small: around 7 plus or minus 2 items. Zip
  codes, phone numbers,
 We    can use chunking to increase
  capacity of STM. Chunking is the
  organization of items into familiar or
  manageable units or chunks.
 There   are two types of rehearsal. These are:
 maintenance rehearsal and elaborative rehearsal.
 Maintenance    rehearsal involves repeating the
 information in your mind. This type of rehearsal
 is useful for retaining something you plan to use
 and then forget, like a phone number.
 Elaborative   rehearsal involves association the
 information; such as trying to remember with
 something      that   we   already   knows,   or   with
 information from long-term memory
long term memory
Long-term    memory (LTM) - is a memory
 system used for the relatively permanent
 storage of meaningful information.
The capacity of LTM seems to have no
 practical limits..
    Forgetting
refer  to the apparent loss of information
 already encoded and stored in the long-term
 memory.
Psychologists have proposed mechanisms to
 account for forgetting:
    1. The Decay Theory
The decay theory holds that memory traces or
 engram fade with time if they are not
 accessed now and then
passage       of time causes for
 information loss.
     2. Interference theory
Interferencetheory holds that forgetting occurs
 because similar items of information interfere
 with one another in either storage or retrieval.
 The information may get into memory, but it
 becomes confused with other information.
Proactive  interference - memory retrieval
 problem that occurs when older information
 prevents or interferes with the retrieval of
 newer information.
Retroactive interference - memory retrieval
 problem that occurs when newer information
 prevents or interferes with the retrieval of
 older information.
3. Emotions: Rise in emotions like fear or anger or love
lead to forget the learned experiences e.g. a student
afraid of a teacher may forget what has been learnt.
4. Change of stimulus conditions: we may have
learnt in a specific environment, but we forget in the
changed environment e.g. we can say the speech well
at home but in front of the audience, we are unable to
speak.
5.   Poor Health: this prevents us from remembering
     learnt material
6.   Defective    mental   state,   fatigue,   lack    of
     interest or willingness all lead to forgetting
Motivated Forgetting
Sigmund Freud maintained that people forget
because they block from consciousness those
memories that are too threatening or painful to
live with, and he called this self-protective
process Repression.
Cue Dependent Forgetting
Often   when we need to remember, we rely on
retrieval cues, items of information that can
help us find the specific information we‘re
looking for.
When       we lack retrieval cues, we may
feel as if we have lost the call number for an entry
in the mind‘s library.
In   long-term memory, this type of memory
failure may be the most common type of all.
Factors     which helps to minimizing Forgetting or
  Factors which help to improve Memory
1. Rate of Learning: It’s a fallacy that rapid learning is
    associated with rapid forgetting ‘easy come easy do’.
    But the reverse is actually true, in rapid learning
    forgetting is slow & when learning is slow forgetting
    is rapid.
Thus a slow learner would eventually lose interest in
  the subject thus forget the material rather quickly than
  a quick learner.
2. Over learning: forgetting is said to be taking place as
soon as we stop learning.
So we must recall immediately after we have learnt &
  it must continue after intervals.
Learning must be carried beyond the point where
  recall is just barely possible. Over learning, beyond the
  point of complete mastery, strengthens the
  impressions in the brain.
3. Periodic review: Reviews at frequent intervals
prevent the decay of the learnt data or
information.
4. Kind of Material: easy, simple, meaningful and
logically related materials are easy to retain &
forgotten less rapidly.
 Meaningless materials are forgotten quickly.
 Thus associations make material meaningful &
  quick to remember.
5. Intention to Learn: firm determination or strong
will to learn is required to achieve success.
 Same material given to sets of students wherein
  one is willing & other is not willing; in such cases
  we see that retention was greater in those
  students who had a determination to learn.
6. Proper Methods of Learning:
economical method must be chosen
depending on the material to be learnt,
so we chose spaced versus mass or
whole versus part learning.
7. Self-recitation: After reading a lesson a
few times, the student must try to review
the whole thing without the help of a
book.
This method may also be termed as
  attempted recall and it makes a more
  economical use of one’s study time. It
  also helps towards permanent retention.
How   can we improve the way we learn?
◦ A will to learn: Learning is better achieved when
  there is a drive to learn. Thus without intention
  learning is not achieved much.
◦ Use multiple sensory learning: Things are
  better remembered when presented through more
  than one sense e.g. heard & written on the
  blackboard help better retention than only hearing
  something
◦ Rehearse and Recite: Rehearsal & recitation are
  useful in memorizing thus self-evaluation is
  possible and learning can be modified accordingly.
◦ Space your learning: Spacing what we learn or
  distributed learning helps better retention learning
  as things learnt in small parts is retained longer.
◦ Follow the principle of association: Associating
  what we are learning with what we already know
  helps in remembering. E.g. A for apple, Z for zebra
  etc.
◦ Use Correlation: Topics must not be taught or
  learnt in water tight compartments thus correlate
  with experiences & related subjects to make
  learning interesting.
◦ Grouping & rhythm e.g. multiplication tables and
  poems are easy to learn because of grouping &
  rhythm. Use of Mnemonics also aids learning.
◦ Whole to Part to whole: Before intensive study, go
  through the whole matter, understand it, break it to
  parts & then study it whole following the whole to
  part to whole method.
◦ Take breaks: Periods of change, rest & sleep helps
  remove fatigue & monotony thus fresh mind stores
  meaningful experiences for longer time.
◦ Over learn: Over learning helps retention. Review
  and revise very often.
◦ Avoid     interference     of   subject   similarity:
  Interference causes forgetting so similar situations,
  subjects, etc. must be spaced out. Complete the
  work, do sufficient drill work & then begin the next
  learning situation.
◦ Good Environment: Better learning environment
  makes learning interesting & vivid by using teaching
  aids, adopting new methods and techniques.