Wednesday, July 11, 2012

Cognitivism in Practice

 This week we have learned about the cognitive learning theory. The cognitive learning theory revolves around information processing. There are three stages of information processing: sensory, short term memory, and long term memory. (Laureate Education, Inc., n.d.). In the classroom, our ultimate goal is to store our content into the students long term memory. In order to successfully complete this goal, we have to make sure we are integrating multiple senses. When you integrate multiple senses you improve the chances of students be able to recall the knowledge on a long term basis (Laureate Education, n.d.). This week we learned about two different teaching methods that I believe are successful cognitive learning strategies.

The first strategy is cues, questions and advanced organizers. The main purpose of this strategy is to help students organize information so that they can more easily retrieve it and use it at a later date (Pitler, Hubbell, Kuhn & Malenoski, 2007). Cues and questioning allow students to take their current understanding and reinforce it by connecting it to questions being asked. This method can also challenge students to dig deeper and learn more about the topic. The advanced organizers are a great tool for students to use to make a visual of their understanding of the topic. It takes the words they are processing in their head and outlines it in a visual that explains their individual understanding.

The second strategy is summarizing and note taking. Summarizing and note taking focuses on enhancing students' ability to synthesize information and distill it into a concise new form (Pitler, Hubbell, Kuhn & Malenoski, 2007). When taking notes or summarizing my hope as a teacher is that my students are putting the information in a useful format that will help them recall it at a later date. The data can be used as a trigger to help students quickly recall what they had learned. I have used summarizing in my classroom through journaling and blogging. This has been productive because it gives students a condensed version of what they learned. I feel that the advanced organizers can be a powerful tool to enhance note taking and give a quick visual to trigger the information. This coming up school year I plan on using a lot more organizers in place of long written notes.

References:
Laureate Education, Inc. (Producer). (n.d.). Cognitive Learning Theories. [DVD]. Baltimore, MD: Author.

Pitler, H., Hubbell, E., Kuhn, M., & Malenoski, K. (2007). Using technology with classroom instruction that works. Alexandria, VA: ASCD.

3 comments:

  1. I also plan on using more organizers in the classroom this year. I have not seen them used a lot in math classes but I am going to start using them in my Geometry classes first and see if I can tell a difference. I also love the idea of using a blog to help with summarizing but once again, I am not quite sure how I can incorporate that into my classroom yet.

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  2. I use the strategy of beginning lessons with cues and questions quite often. I always felt it was very effective in focusing students' thinking prior to a lesson. Now I understand the benefits more clearly. "Questions perform the same function as cues by triggering students' memories and helping them to access prior knowledge" (Pitler, Hubbell, Kuhn, & Malenoski, 2007).
    I am going to try and improve the quality of my questions, as suggested in this week's resources. I will try and work with a curriculum-based, essential question. "Higher-level questions and advance organizers produce deeper learning than lower-level questions and advance organizers" (Pitler, et al., 2007).
    I must admit, I have not been as good about using advance organizers as frequently as I should. My goal is to begin creating and saving some quality organizers into my SMART Notebook for use with the students. My kindergartners will most likely benefit from the use of these as a whole group instruction and collaboration, or a very primitive, partially completed organizer.
    Lisa LeBlanc
    Pitler, H., Hubbell, E., Kuhn, M., & Malenoski, K. (2007). Using technology with classroom instruction that works. Alexandria, VA: ASCD.

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    Replies
    1. Eric,

      I love how you stated that we can use note-taking and summarizing as a helpful trigger to recall information from students minds. Higher order thinking questions are essential in our classrooms as they teach students to think for themselves. I also love your connection about advanced organizers and using them to trigger students thoughts.

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