Friday, April 29, 2011

Final Blog

R- Final

Question: What can be said for intrinsic motivation where the social cognitive theory is concerned?

"The knowledge and skills that individuals possess will certainly play critical roles in what they choose to do and not do. But it is important to emphasize that people must invariably interpret the results of their attainments just as they must make judgments about the quality of the knowledge and skills they possess"

Both articles do a great job of presenting the information on the reciprocity of learning. Self-efficacy; the persons belief in their ability to perform a certain task or learn seemed to be important to learning. I want to reflect on my question here. The social learning theory emphasizes a model where the environment is changing the individual and the individual changes the environment. If the individual does not believe in his/her ability they cannot motivate themselves and thus there is a need for the external influence of the social environment such as that of the teacher to help in the process. Dweck (2005) emphasized that the students have got to participate in the process. I have read in the Chicago Tribune a couple of years ago where there was a discussion on performance based salary increases for teachers. This phenomenon was strongly being opposed at the time by the Chicago Teachers Union. The union believed that there should be some accountability for the student in the school's performance and the ownership of the performance should not be the teacher's alone.

The self-efficacy and the belief have to be the same for a student to perform the tasks needed to be successful (Pajares 2005, pg. 342). Going back to Bruner's article The Culture of Education (1996) he stated, "culture shapes minds ......... and construct not only our worlds but our very conception of ourselves and our powers". He went on to say that acquiring knowledge becomes more meaningful when the individuals cognitively discover it for themselves. It is only then that they can use it and add it to the things they already know (Bruner 1996, pg. 11). The social cognitive theory can definitely be related to Bruner's culture of education in that they both emphasize the influence by the environment. On the surface we may think that they are different but I can see where they may be the same. Social cognitive theory involves reciprocity. The culture of education can relate because we are influenced by our culture and at the same time we influence our culture. Culture is a set of shared social norms. These norms are in fact actions and beliefs that the group of people themselves has established and later these actions become norms, and thus a reciprocal change.

Wednesday, April 13, 2011

R10 Multitasking/Minimal Guidance/Cognitive Load

"When we talk about multitasking, we are really talking about attention: the art of paying attention, the ability to shift our attention, and, more broadly, to exercise judgment about what objects are worthy of our attention. People who have achieved great things often credit for their success a finely honed skill for paying attention" (Rosen 2008, p. 109). This particular quote sounds pretty close to constructivist theory of learning. This art of multitasking outlines that the individual decides what is important and what is attention worthy. In essence the person gets to decide which tasks they should or would pay attention to. To this end, he or she is moving from one task to the other based on what they feel is important to attend to. Thereby, constructing their task attentiveness.
Both of the articles for this week's reading were very interesting. We can all admit to multi-tasking. The fact of the matter I always felt that it was a good skill to be able to attend to so many tasks at the same time. Rosen (2008) presented a new perspective for me. His article introduced the term "task shifting". I had never really thought about multi-tasking in this way ever before. However, it did make me re-evaluate whether I was actually performing more than one task at the same time. His label of Attention Deficit Trait was again kind of funny because I was thinking during the reading and before that the quick movement from task to task was quite similar to Attention Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) Inattentive Type. The only difference between the two is the fact that individuals with AD/HD Inattentive Type and multi-tasking is that in the AD/HD Inattentive Type individuals do not follow through with instructions and do not completing tasks. They constantly move from one task to the other without completing anything (American Psychiatric Association [DSM-IV-TR], 2000).

Kirschner, Sweller & Clark (2006) in their article discusses the constructivists approach to learning and its impact on students. One of the things that stood out to me was their discussion of the times in which minimal guidance could work. They stated in the article that novice and intermediate learners would not benefit from this self-guided instruction. The reason they gave was that students learn the wrong information and they overload their working memory causing cognitive load that is not conducive to learning. This stood out because it made me think of its relation to Vygotsky's zone of proximal development. In other words, it is the range of abilities that a person can perform with assistance, but not independently. So, finding the point in which an individual can learn without assistance or minimal guidance is important for determining whether they can guide or design their own learning experiences. According to the article this constructivist approach or minimal guidance is not effective because it does not allow the information to be stored for long-term memory usage (Kirschner, Sweller & Clark 2006).

In my personal experience I tend to feel overwhelmed when I am faced with attending to many tasks at once or as the article refers to it "task-shifting". It is as if I am all over the map with the things that I am doing. Many times I end up getting frustrated and quit, leave the tasks and coming back later after a break or work myself into a migraine like headache. This is very typical of what Rosen (2008) stated in his article. The constant multitasking even though we think we are getting numerous tasks completed we are often wasting lots of time in between each task shift. I know I always intend to get certain things done in my multitasking quest but almost always only end up getting one or two things done, which is the only thing that separates me from the DSM V-TR diagnosis of Attention Deficit Hyperactive Disorder Inattentive Type. I can see how the number of adults being diagnosed with this disorder can increase. There is an increase in demand on our time as we perform our jobs in careers and as students. We want to be able to get large amounts of information and productivity in the least amount of time. To this end, I sometimes feel as if I am a Jack-of-all-trades but master of none. "When people do their work only in the “interstices of their mind-wandering,” with crumbs of attention rationed out among many competing tasks, their culture may gain in information, but it will surely weaken in wisdom" (Rosen 2008, p. 110).
Question: With this constant "Attention Deficit Trait" related to multi-tasking, can this soon become a diagnosis of a disorder? Or is the fact that new technologies allows us to use so many gadgets, fooling us into thinking that we are multitasking, when in fact we are only running so many programs at once on our computers and moving from task to task that really the computer is multitasking and we are not?

References
American Psychiatric Association. (2000). Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders (Revised 4th ed.). Washington, DC: Author.

Kirschner, P. A., Sweller, J., & Clark, R. E. (2006). Why minimal guidance during instruction does not work: an analysis of the failure of constructivist, discovery, problem-based, experiential, and inquiry-based teaching. Educational Psychologist, 41, 75-86.

Rosen, C. (2008). The myth of multitasking. The New Atlantis, 64, 105-110.

Saturday, April 9, 2011

Long-Term Memory

https://exchange.uky.edu/owa/redir.aspx?C=b5cf33532cff41cca6ac9178f127e7af&URL=http%3a%2f%2fvideo.google.com%2fvideoplay%3fdocid%3d-602962800234523793%26hl%3den

This presents information about memory. It talks about the complexities of how memories work. It also gives information on when memory is at its peek in humans as well. It gives information on good memories and bad memories and how we remember thing that we would most likely want to forget. It also talks about treatment of memory disorder.

Thursday, April 7, 2011

Sensory registers, perception, attention, and learning

doi:10.1016/S1053-8119(02)00030-7

The attached article is related to the use of Cognitive Behavior Therapy to change the perception of spider phobias. I used this article to illustrate that the way a person perceives a situation can be changed and diminish certain phobias or anxieties. An example of mind over matter. The title of the article is "Change the mind and you change the brain”: effects of cognitive-behavioral therapy on the neural correlates of spider phobia. This article was very interesting to me as a future school psychologist as an approach to mental health treatment for anxieties.

R9 Long-term Memory and Retrieval

Quote:
"Again emotions add the adrenaline that will mark that will mark these memories as important and worth saving" (King-Friedrichs, p. 78).

With the buzz in education on differentiating instruction, can we say that educators have recognized the need to connect with students in areas that are nativeor have an emotional connection to? Also can this differentiation lead to improvement of long-term memory functioning?

The thing that makes me wonder about long-term memory and retrieval, is whether it all leads to learning. In King-Friedrichs' (2001) article the teacher was able to use what the students experienced in their travels to make connections in the lesson. She got the students to visualize the longitudinal line and latitudinal lines in relation to the trips that they had taken.This article emphasized that the students would be more likely to store the geographic information in their long-term memorey as a result of the connection. To this end, I wonder if the students would be able to apply the information or just remember the definition of the terms. It would be important to remember the definition of the terms for testing but it is unclear to me if the storage of the information can ensure application at a later date. James (2001) in his chapter on memory stated that " .........the art of remembering is the art of thinking; .................. The connecting is the thinking; and, if we attend clearly to the connection, the connected thing will certainly be likely to remain within recall" (p. 70). Even though James emphasized that something is remembered when it is connected to prior experiences and stored until it is needed, does the need manifest itself in regurgitation or application?

The movie Race To Nowhere outlined that students in AP programs are remembering lots of information but they are only remembering it for testing and then they no longer remember the information. It also outlined that even though these students in high school have passed the AP tests they are still less prepared for college level subject matter. I guess with these individuals the information is short-term memory and not long-term memory storage. This was so clear in the Foer (2011) article when the reporter was able to come up with connections to remember the order of the decks of cards. This was clearly just regurgitation. These kinds of skills are wonderful for factual information but would not it translate to its use for solving problems.

I taught resource classes of high school students with mild intellectual disabilities. One of the classes was split by a lunch period and halfway through the class my students would go to lunch and come back to the second half of the class. I would always have to reteach the information from the beginning of the class because by the time these individuals returned they would often lose most of the information. For this population their are problems with some short-term and almost all long-term memory storage. When I taught them I would use connections to their interests but the problem still existed. When it comes to long-term memory for this population it is very difficult to retain information and repetition is key. Even with the repetition it's still a problem because it is a manifestation of their disability. What would King-Friedrichs, Foer and James suggest to address improving the learning of this population understanding their difference?

Foer, J. (2011, February). Secrets of a mind-gamer: How I trained my brain and became a world-class memory athlete. New York Times. Retrieved from http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2011/02/20/magazine/mind-secrets.html?hp.
 James, W. (1899/2001). Talks to teachers on psychology and to students on some of life's ideals. Mineola, NY: Dover. ISBN: 0486-41964-9. 
 King-Friedrichs, J. (2001). Brain-friendly techniques for improving memory. Educational Leadership, 59(3), 76-69.