Child and Adolescent Learners and Learning Principles - Leth-Leth Jose
Child and Adolescent Learners and Learning Principles - Leth-Leth Jose
Child and Adolescent Learners and Learning Principles - Leth-Leth Jose
Jose
Year and Course: BTVTEd IV – D Food and Service Management
The Child and Adolescent Learners and Learning Principles
ACTIVITY 1
C. Periods of Development
Developmentalists often break the lifespan into eight stages:
1. Prenatal Development
2. Infancy and Toddlerhood
3. Early Childhood
4. Middle Childhood
5. Adolescence
6. Early Adulthood
7. Middle Adulthood
8. Late Adulthood
E. Domains of Development
Domain 1: Biological (includes neuroscience, consciousness, and sensation)
Domain 2: Cognitive (includes the study of perception, cognition, memory, and intelligence)
Domain 4: Social and Personality (includes the study of personality, emotion, motivation, gender, and culture)
B. Physical and Motor Development - Physical development and motor development are two similar but distinct
areas that describe child development. Physical development includes all the different changes that a child's
body go through. These changes include height, weight, and brain development. Motor development is the
development of controlling the body.
C. Neuroscience and Brain development – Neuroscience and brain development. The human brain undergoes
significant changes during adolescence, which is often reflected in the behavior of young people. Throughout
life, experiences continuously shape our brains. Thanks to the flexibility of the brain, we continue to learn,
acquire new skills, and form new memories throughout our lives.
D. Factors Affecting Biological/Physical Development - The 3 biological factors affecting growth and
development are: Genetic Inheritance, Gender, and Hormones
E. Theories
1. Developmental Milestones (Gesell) - Gesell’s theory is known as the Maturational Theory of Child
Development was introduced in1925 by Dr. Arnold Gesell, an American educator, pediatrician, and clinical
psychologist whose studies focused on “the course, the pattern, and rate of Maturational growth in normal and
exceptional children.
2. Ecological Systems Theory (Bronfenbrenner) - According to Bronfenbrenner's theory, there are various
"layers" of the environment that have an impact on a child's development. This theory has recently been
renamed "bioecological systems theory". The development is fueled and guided by the interaction of elements
in his biologically maturing environment, his immediate family and community, and the social environment.
"It is what teachers think, what teachers do, and what teachers are at
the level of the classroom that ultimately shapes the kind of
learning that young people get."
2. This theory is premised on the assumption that knowledge is passed from adults to children through social
interactions. The theorist argues that a child acquires knowledge through the interaction with experienced
persons such as teachers or other older groups of people. As opposed to the Piaget’s theory that does not
emphasize on communication, Vygotsky insists that communication is essential.
6.
D. Language Development
Language development is a process of learning in which children acquire the forms, meanings, and uses of
words and utterances from linguistic input.
1. Content Theories
- Hierarchy of Needs (Maslow)
Maslow's need-hierarchy theory argues that job satisfaction implies that an individual's need in the job
environment is based on a five-tier model of human needs, arranged in ascending order of importance
(physiological, safety, belonging, esteem, and self-actualization).
2. Process Theories
- Reinforcement Theory (Skinner)
Reinforcement theory is a psychological principle suggesting that behaviors are shaped by their consequences,
and that individual behaviors can be changed through reinforcement, punishment and extinction. According to
Skinner, a person’s internal needs and drives are not important areas of concern because their current behaviors
follow the law of effect and are based on the consequences of former behaviors. This means that behaviors can
be altered or manipulated over time.
Managers using reinforcement theory to motivate staff should explain to employees which behaviors will result
in positive feedback. Positive reinforcement involves providing rewards to reinforce desired behaviors, while
negative reinforcement involves the removal of aversive stimuli to reinforce the target behavior. Extinction
involves withholding valued consequences to reduce the occurrence of undesired behaviors. To avoid unwanted
extinction, managers must continue to reward desired behaviors.
Kohlberg’s theory of moral development is a theory that focuses on how children develop morality and
moral reasoning. Kohlberg’s theory suggests that moral development occurs in a series of six stages and
that moral logic is primarily focused on seeking and maintaining justice.
Elliott Turiel’s Moral Domain Theory outlined three separate components to the moral development of
an individual. Turiel’s theory believes that the gaining of moral knowledge begins at an extremely
young age. The three components are societal, psychological and moral.
Gilligan’s stage theory of moral development is also important to psychology for reasons that go beyond
the issue of moral development. Her theory represents an effort to ensure that researchers do not
unintentionally portray developmental changes in boys as being synonymous with developmental
changes in humans in general.
5.4. A. What is Learning? - A common definition of learning is a somewhat permanent change in behavior
brought on by experience. It may be simple to slip into the trap of simply contemplating formal education that
occurs during infancy and early adulthood when you think of learning.
B. Approaches to Learning – It is domain focuses on how children learn. It refers to the skills and behaviors that
children use to engage in learning. It incorporates emotional, behavioral, and cognitive self-regulation as well as
initiative, curiosity, and creativity.
1. Behavioral perspective - It is a theoretical perspective that explains learning and behavior in terms of
stimulus-response relationships. It assumes that people's behaviors are a result of their interaction with
the environment and that learning must involve a behavioral change. Animals and humans learn in
similar ways.
2. Social cognitive - Cognitive psychology is a theoretical perspective that focuses on learning based on
how people perceive, remember, think, speak, and problem-solve. It acknowledges the existence of
internal mental states, such as belief, desire, ideas, and motivation, and claims memory structures
determine how information is perceived, processed, stored, retrieved, and forgotten.
4. Cognitive constructivist - Cognitive constructivism refers to the process that combines the logic of
cognitive behavior and the personal approach of constructivist behavior. In this process, the individual
uses logic to understand things, and couples it with a different learning style that comes from a
behavioral and humanistic factor.
5. Social constructivist - Social constructivism is the view that learning occurs through social interaction
and the help of others, often in a group. Social constructivism posits that the understanding an individual
develops is shaped through social interaction.
At the foundation of this theory is the belief that knowledge is not a copy of an objective reality but is
rather the result the mind selecting and making sense of and recreating experiences. This means that
knowledge is the result of interactions between both subjective and environmental factors.
C. Connectionism - Connectionism is present in some form in most classrooms, but more significantly in those
of teachers or professors that students tend to remember for years to come and truly learn from.
D. Conditioning - Child development is closely associated with the way in which parents may condition them to
develop favorable and appropriate behaviors throughout the period of growing up. Thus, operant conditioning,
which was initially developed by B.F. Skinner is implemented to change behaviors by using a system of
rewards and punishments.
1. Classical – According to Russian Physiologist named Ivan Pavlov, it focuses on involuntary, automatic
behaviors and involves placing a neutral signal before a reflex. Classical conditioning is a process that
involves creating an association between a naturally existing stimulus and a previously neutral one.
2. Contiguous - Contiguity theory is intended to be a general theory of learning, although most of the
research supporting the theory was done with animals. Guthrie did apply his framework to personality
disorders.
3. Operant - First described by B. F. Skinner, an American psychologist, it involves applying
reinforcement or punishment after a behavior and focuses on strengthening or weakening voluntary
behaviors.
E. Behavior Analysis in Education - Behavior analysis has been used for over 60 years to improve teaching and
increase learning across content areas, grade levels, and student populations. It provides a scientific approach to
designing, implementing, and evaluating instruction based on analyzing interactions between what the teacher
does and student learning. Key features include high rates of relevant learner responses with contingent
feedback and ongoing instructional decision-making based on direct and frequent measures of student
performance. It also informs curriculum development from basic academics to concept formation and problem-
solving.
F. Gestalt-Insight Learning - Insightful learning is also known as Gestalt learning which means that learning is
concerned with the whole individual and arises from the interaction of an individual with his situations or
environment. Through this interaction emerge new forms of perception, imagination and ideas which altogether
constitute insight.
G. Experiential Learning Theory - Experiential learning is the idea that experiences are generated through our
ongoing interactions and engagement with the world around us, and learning is an inevitable product of
experience. This theory of learning is different from cognitive and behavioral learning theories as it takes a
more holistic approach.
D. Positive Discipline
The Positive Discipline process emphasizes an employee’s responsibility and accountability for his/her behavior
and actions by communicating an expectation of change and improvement in a respectful, non-threatening way
while maintaining concern for the seriousness of the situation. Key aspects include recognizing and encouraging
superior performance, correcting performance problems through coaching and counseling, building
commitment to high work standards and safe work practices, and promoting excellence in the delivery of
services.