Cognitive Theory of Learning
The cognitive theory of
learning lays emphasis on the human conscious mind being the major element in
the learning process. It explains the careful structuring of the mind that
enables it collect, organize and relate new experiences and knowledge to the
already existing ones in the brain. One of the advocates of cognitive learning theory is Piaget.
Piaget’s Developmental theory
Piaget
is a Swiss psychologist. He started his work just before Second World War. The
main research areas of Piaget were how children develop and learn. Piaget's
stage theory describes the cognitive development of children. Cognitive
development involves changes in cognitive process and abilities.
In
his theory, he also explained that there are three dominant factors on children
cognitive development.
It is the unfolding of biological changes
that are genetically programmed into us at birth.
Activity is related with maturation
directly. This means that an increase maturations means child will be more
cognitively develop and act to the environment and surroundings and learn from
those actions.
3. Transmission:
The
word transmission is used to describe the act of learning from others. As and
when child become an adult and interact more people, a positive influence on
child’s learning can be observed because of social interaction with others.
A Piaget stage of development is a
blueprint that describes the stages of normal intellectual development, from
infancy through adulthood. This includes thought, judgment, and knowledge.
The summary of the Piaget's four
stages of intellectual (or cognitive) development are as follows.
Schemas - A schema is a mental structure we use to organize
and simplify our knowledge of the world around us. A
schema describes both the mental and physical actions involved in understanding
and knowing. In Piaget's view, a schema includes both a category of knowledge
and the process of obtaining that knowledge.
For example, a young child may first develop a schema for a horse. She knows that a horse is large, has hair, four legs and a tail. When the little girl encounters a cow for the first time, she might initially call it a horse. After all, it fits in with her schema for the characteristics of a horse. Once she is told that this is a different animal called a cow, she will modify her existing schema for a horse and create a new schema for a cow. She now realizes that an animal which are large, has hair, four legs and tail is not always be a horse. It can be another animals.
Assimilation - The process of taking in new information into our previously existing schemas is known as assimilation. The process is somewhat subjective, because we tend to modify experience or information somewhat to fit in with our pre-existing beliefs. In the example above, seeing a “cow” and labeling it "horse" is an example of assimilating the animal into the child's horse schema.
Accommodation - The process of accommodation involves altering one's existing schemas, or ideas, as a result of new information or new experiences. New schemas may also be developed during this process. In the example above, when the child learns that cows also have four legs, has hair and a tail she will undergo a process of accommodation in which her existing schema for horse will change and she will also develop a new schema for cows.
General educational implications of
cognitive theories:
1. Cognitive
processes influence learning.
2. Learning
difficulties often indicate ineffective or inappropriate cognitive processes,
especially for children with learning disabilities, who tend to process
information less effectively. Therefore, teachers need to be aware that all
students are trying to learn something, as well as what they are trying to
learn.
3. As
children grow, they become capable of increasingly more sophisticated thought.
4. People
organize the things they learn. Therefore, teachers can facilitate students'
learning by presenting information in an organized manner. This organization
should reflect students' previous knowledge and show how one thing relates to
the other (i.e., helping students understand and make connections).
5. New
information is most easily acquired when people can associate it with things
they have already learned. Teachers should then show how new ideas relate to
previous learning.
5. People
control their own learning. Ultimately students, not their teachers, determine
what things will be learned and how they will be learned.
References
McLeod, S. A. (2009). Jean Piaget | Cognitive Theory.Retrieved from http://www.simplypsychology.org/piaget.html