The Learning Process Flashcards
Reference for The Learning Process
FAA Aviation Instructor’s Handbook
Define learning
A change in behavior as a result of an exsperience
Learning Theory
Behaviorism:
Study of observable behavior (stimulus and response)
monkey skills
Cognitive Theory:
The mental process of learning, understanding why a student did something.
Used in teaching ADM
Perceptions and insights
Perceptions:
Meaning given to sensations
The basis for all learning
Insights:
Mental grouping of perceptions into meaningful wholes
Leading students to insights is one of the instructors primary responsibilities and showing how each one relates to the other.
Acquiring Knowledge
Memorizing (first step)
Understanding (notice similarities and make associations)
Concept Learning (form generalized concepts from particular facts or steps)
The Laws of Learning (Thorndike)
Readiness
Effect
Exercise
Primacy
Intensity
Recency
Domains of Learning
Cognitive (knowledge) Thinking
4 levels of learning: Rote Understanding Application Correlation
Affective (attitude) feeling
Psychomotor (skills) doing
Characteristics of learning
Learning is purposeful
Learning is a result of experience
Learning is multifaceted
Learning is an active process
Learning styles
Left/Right brain
Holistic/Serialist Theory
Visual/auditory/kinesthetic learner‘s
Acquiring skill knowledge
Knowledge reflected in motor or manual skills and in cognitive or mental skills that manifest itself in the doing of something.
Stages of skills:
Cognitive (memorize the steps)
Associative (practice and can make adjustments)
Automatic response (do without thinking about it)
Learning plateaus
Types of practice
Deliberate:
Practice specific areas for improvement and receives specific feedback
Blocked:
Repetition until movement becomes automatic (short term good, long term bad)
Random:
Mix up skills to be acquired during practice (good for longterm retention)
Scenario-based training
Realistic real world scenario
A good scenario:
Has a clear set of objectives
Is tailored to the needs of the student
Capitalizes on the nuances of the local environment
Errors
Slip:
Plan to do one thing but do something else or don’t do anything
Mistakes:
Successfully do the wrong thing
Ways to prevent errors:
Taking your time
Checking for errors
Using reminders
Developing routines
Memory and forgetting
Types of memory
Sensory memory:
Receive initial stimuli from the environment, only last for a few seconds
Short term memory:
Last roughly 3o sec and then fades away or goes to long-term memory
Long-term memory:
Permanent storage of unlimited information
A re-creation
Memory and forgetting
Reasons for forgetting
Retrieval failure (poor encoding)
Fading (decay due to not being used)
Interference (Experienced overshadowed by something similar)
Repression (you subconsciously don’t want to recall)
Suppression (consciously do not want to recall)