sTrial Version.........
learning
A relatively permanent influence on behavior, knowledge, and thinking skills that comesabout through experience.
Teaching approaches
1 Behaviorism
Behaviorism
is the view that behavior should be
explained by observable experiences, not by mental processes. For the behaviorist,
behavior is everything that we do, both verbal and nonverbal, that can be directly
seen or heard: a child creating a poster, a teacher explaining something to a child,
one student picking on another student, and so on.
classical conditioning
classical conditioning A form of associative learning in which a neutral stimulus becomes associated with a meaningful stimulus and acquires the capacity to elicit a similar response
more cognitive, or began focusing more on thought, in the last part of the twentieth
century. Th e cognitive emphasis continues today and is the basis for numerous
approaches to learning (Ashcraft & Radvansky, 2010; Martinez, 2010).
main cognitive approaches to learning
a social cognitive
b information
processing
c cognitive constructivist
d social constructivism.