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Educational Psychology: Theory and Practice Chapter 6
Information Processing and Cognitive Theories of Learning This multimedia product and its contents are protected under copyright law. The following are prohibited by law: any public performance or display, including transmission of any image over a network; preparation of any derivative work, including the extraction, in whole or in part, of any images; any rental, lease, or lending of the program. ISBN: Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2003
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Organizing Questions What Is Information Processing Model?
What Causes People to Remember or Forget? How Can Memory Strategies Be Taught? What Makes Information Meaningful?
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Organizing Questions How Do Cognitive Skills Help Students Learn?
What Study Strategies Help Students Learn? How Do Cognitive Teaching Strategies Help Students Learn?
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Information-Processing Theory
“Cognitive Theory of Learning that describes the Processing, Storage, and Retrieval of Knowledge in the Mind.”
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Sensory Register Perception Attention Gaining Attention
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Short-Term Memory Working Memory Rehearsal Working Memory Capacity
Individual Differences
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Long-Term Memory Episodic Memory Semantic Memory Procedural Memory
Flashbulb Memory Semantic Memory Schemata Procedural Memory
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Schema for the Concept “Cat”
Description Small Furry Non-mammals Diet Meat Loves Tuna Animals Cat Mammals Non-cat Uses Catch Mice Companions
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Factors Enhancing Long-Term Memory
Type of Information Time Degree of Learning Instructional Strategies
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Other Information Processing Models
Levels-of-Processing Theory Dual Code Theory Visual Verbal Parallel Distributed Processing Model Connectionist Models
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Research on the Brain Brain Specialization Hemispheric Asymmetry
Left Hemisphere Right Hemisphere Importance of Early Stimulation Plasticity Efficiency
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Forgetting and Remembering
Interference Retroactive Inhibition Proactive Inhibition Individual Differences Facilitation Proactive Retroactive Primacy Effects Recency Effects Automaticity Implications for Education
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Practice Massed Practice Distributed Practice Enactment
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How can Memory Strategies be Taught?
“If students can memorize the routine things more efficiently, they can free their minds for tasks that involve understanding and reasoning.” (p. 194)
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Verbal Learning Paired-Associate Learning Serial Learning
Free-Recall Learning
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Paired-Associate Learning
Imagery Keyword Mnemonics Research Findings
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Serial and Free-Recall Learning
Loci Method Pegword Method Initial-Letter Strategies
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Rote versus Meaningful Learning
Rote Learning Meaningful Learning Uses of Rote Learning Inert Knowledge
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Schema Theory Hierarchies of Knowledge
The Importance of Background Knowledge
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How Do Metacognitive Skills Help Students Learn?
Metacognition Metacognitive Skills Thinking Study Skills Self-Assessment Prediction Self-Questioning Strategies
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Helpful Study Strategies
Note Taking Underlining Summarizing Writing to Learn Outlining and Mapping The PQ4R Method
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Making Learning Relevant and Activating Prior Knowledge
Advance Organizers Analogies Elaboration
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Organizing Information
Using Questioning Techniques Using Conceptual Models Graphs Charts Tables Matrices
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End of Chapter 6
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