Learning: Theories, Characteristics & Memory
Welcome to the second chapter of the Teaching Aptitude unit for UGC NET Paper 1. This comprehensive chapter shifts the focus from the teacher to the learner. Here, you will master the psychological mechanics of memory, the developmental stages of students, individual differences, and the foundational learning theoriesβfrom Behaviorism to Constructivism. Select a study module below to begin.
Concept of Learning, Curve & Plateau
Understand the fundamentals of learning, graphical learning curves, and the specific causes behind learning plateaus.
Study Module →Associative & Non-Associative Learning
Differentiate between single-stimulus learning (habituation, sensitization) and foundational associative processes.
Study Module →Types of Learning & Self-Regulated Learners
Explore active, passive, and latent learning, along with the precise cycle of Self-Regulated Learning (SRL).
Study Module →Transfer of Learning (Types & Examples)
Master the concepts of positive, negative, zero, near, far, high-road, and low-road transfer of learning.
Study Module →Forms of Learning & Instruction
Analyze cooperative, inquiry-based, and situated learning across formal and informal educational environments.
Study Module →Characteristics of Adolescent Learners
Study the physical, intellectual, and emotional development specific to adolescents, including identity formation.
Study Module →Characteristics of Adult Learners
Delve into the problem-solving orientations, self-direction, and internal motivations of adult learners (Andragogy).
Study Module →Rote Learning & Types of Memory
Understand shallow processing, repetitive memorization, and their links to the brain's various memory systems.
Study Module →Memory Components & Interference Theory
Master retention, recall, recognition, and the critical differences between proactive and retroactive interference.
Study Module →Types of Memory (Explicit, Implicit & Working)
Differentiate between explicit (episodic/semantic) and implicit (procedural/priming) long-term memory systems.
Study Module →Metacognition & Metacognitive Skills
Explore the cycle of planning, monitoring, and evaluating, along with instructional tools like KWL charts.
Study Module →Bloom's Taxonomy & Teaching Theories
Master the cognitive, affective, and psychomotor domains of educational objectives and their hierarchical levels.
Study Module →Dale's Cone of Experience
Visualize memory retention rates based on the concreteness of active versus passive learning mediums.
Study Module →Howard Gardner's Multiple Intelligences
Discover the 8 distinct cognitive modalities, from linguistic and logical to interpersonal and naturalistic.
Study Module →Pedagogy & Cognitivism Learning Theories
Understand the focus on internal mental processes, cognitive development, and strategies like chunking.
Study Module →Piaget's Theory of Cognitive Development
Traverse the 4 developmental stages from Sensorimotor reflexes to Formal Operational abstract thought.
Study Module →Cognitive Theorists (Bruner, Bandura, Ausubel)
Learn about Bruner's Scaffolding, Bandura's Social Cognitive Theory, and Ausubel's Meaningful Learning.
Study Module →Behaviorism, Skinner & Operant Conditioning
Master B.F. Skinner's reinforcement and punishment matrix, along with Watson's foundational behaviorist theories.
Study Module →Pavlov's Classical Conditioning Theory
Decode the critical elements of UCS, UCR, NS, CS, and CR in the conditioning of involuntary reflexes.
Study Module →Constructivism, Dewey & Vygotsky
Explore progressive education, the 5 E's instructional model, and the Zone of Proximal Development (ZPD).
Study Module →Humanism, Connectivism, Andragogy & Heutagogy
Trace the instructional continuum from teacher-led pedagogy to self-directed adult learning and heutagogy.
Study Module →Individual Differences & Learner Characteristics
Analyze the demographic, cognitive, emotional, and social factors that shape unique learner profiles.
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