1 / 25

Training for Organizations

Training for Organizations. Learning Theory. Opening Exercise: Draw a picture of an individual you anticipate participating in your class. Which picture depicts your learners?. What is Learning?. Define!. Adult Education: Assumptions. Learning is not its own reward

borna
Download Presentation

Training for Organizations

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Training for Organizations Learning Theory Chapter 5

  2. Opening Exercise: Draw a picture of an individual you anticipate participating in your class Chapter 5

  3. Which picture depicts your learners? Chapter 5

  4. What is Learning? • Define! Chapter 5

  5. Adult Education: Assumptions • Learning is not its own reward • Adult learning is integrative • Value adjustments must be considered • Adult learners want control • Practice must be meaningful • Adults like to learn at their own pace Chapter 5

  6. Trainers’ Perception of Learners • All learners are like you • Learners know how they learn • You can easily figure out how learners learn • Elliott Masie THE COMPUTER TRAINING HANDBOOK (1995) Lakewood Books, pp. 51-52 Chapter 5

  7. Teaching Styles • Andragogy • “andra” means “man, adult” • Pedagogy • “peda” means “child” • “ago” means “leading” Chapter 5

  8. Learning Styles • The Kolb Learning Style Inventory • Converger • Diverger • Assimilator • Accomodator Chapter 5

  9. Masie’s Thinking Styles • People think in four fundamentally different ways • Most are capable of using all four kinds of thinking, and do so at different times/tasks • Most prefer one style/use it often • Learning is often stressful Chapter 5

  10. Masie’s “Stereotypes” • Reflective thinkers • why? • Conceptual thinkers • what is the whole picture? • Practical thinkers • what’s in it for me? • Creative thinkers • what if? Chapter 5

  11. Behavioral Approach • Observable behavior confirms that learning has taken place • The environment shapes the behavior of the learner • Time between behavior and reinforcement is crucial Chapter 5

  12. Behaviorists • Edward L. Thorndike • S-R Theory • law of effect, exercise, readiness • Ivan Pavlov • B. F. Skinner • operant conditioning • Frederick Taylor • applications Chapter 5

  13. Writing Learning Objectives • Domains: • cognitive • affective • psychomotor Chapter 5

  14. Bloom’s Taxonomy • Knowledge • Comprehension • Application • Analysis • Synthesis • Evaluation Chapter 5

  15. Who is Robert Mager? Chapter 5

  16. GATA • G= GIVEN (CONDITIONS) • A= ACTION (PERFORMANCE) • T= TIME (CRITERIA) • A= ACCURACY (CRITERIA) Chapter 5

  17. Cognitive Science • Remembering and Problem Solving • Organizational facilitates recall • Complex processes operate on an as-needed basis • Schema can be formulated Chapter 5

  18. Workplace Motivation • A Humanist Approach • Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs • Herzberg’s Two-Factor Theory • Rotter’s Locus of Control • Rogers’ Learner-Centered Approach • McGregor’s Theory X and Y Chapter 5

  19. A Humanist Approach • People are inherently good and free to act. Chapter 5

  20. Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs Self actualization Ego/status needs Belonging needs Safety/security needs Basic physiological needs Chapter 5

  21. Rotter’s Locus of Control Within a social context, your personality impacts your learning style and orientation. • Internal Locus of Control • External Locus of Control Chapter 5

  22. Rogers’ Learner-Centered Approach Personalized learning can lead to growth: • personal involvement of the learner • self-initiated activity • activity effects behavior change • learner-evaluated and assessed • learning takes on permanent meaning for the learner Chapter 5

  23. Theory X worker dislikes work must be coerced to work prefers to be directed Theory Y worker likes to work will exercise self-direction seeks responsibility McGregor Chapter 5

  24. In conclusion • Identify the last time you set out to learn something new. • What motivated you to learn? • What learning orientation described your effort? Chapter 5

  25. Any questions? Chapter 5

More Related