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Learning Theories and Pedagogy: Teaching the Traditional Learner

Learning Theories and Pedagogy: Teaching the Traditional Learner

Lawrence A. Tomei
ISBN13: 9781605668246|ISBN10: 1605668249|ISBN13 Softcover: 9781616924379|EISBN13: 9781605668253
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-60566-824-6.ch001
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MLA

Lawrence A. Tomei. "Learning Theories and Pedagogy: Teaching the Traditional Learner." Designing Instruction for the Traditional, Adult, and Distance Learner: A New Engine for Technology-Based Teaching, IGI Global, 2010, pp.1-14. https://doi.org/10.4018/978-1-60566-824-6.ch001

APA

L. Tomei (2010). Learning Theories and Pedagogy: Teaching the Traditional Learner. IGI Global. https://doi.org/10.4018/978-1-60566-824-6.ch001

Chicago

Lawrence A. Tomei. "Learning Theories and Pedagogy: Teaching the Traditional Learner." In Designing Instruction for the Traditional, Adult, and Distance Learner: A New Engine for Technology-Based Teaching. Hershey, PA: IGI Global, 2010. https://doi.org/10.4018/978-1-60566-824-6.ch001

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Abstract

There is little doubt that the most dominant form of instruction is pedagogy, also referred to as didactic, traditional, or teacher-guided instruction. The pedagogical model of instruction has been around for centuries. Young boys were received into schools (most often schools with religious purposes) that required them to be obedient, faithful, and efficient servants of the church (Knowles, 1984). From these beginning developed the practice of pedagogy which remains the dominant form of instruction for the traditional learner. Pedagogy is derived from the Greek word “peda,” meaning child and “agogos,” meaning “the study of.” Thus, pedagogy has been defined as the art and science of teaching children. In a pedagogical model, the teacher has responsibility for making decisions about the content to be learned, the methodology for delivering the instruction, the sequencing and presentation (i.e., when it will be learned), and ultimately, an assessment of whether or not the material has been learned. Pedagogy, by its definition and nature, places the student in a submissive/ receptive role rather than an active learning position, requiring unswerving compliance to the teacher’s directions. It is based on the assumption that the teacher knows best what the student should learn; the teacher assumes the position of “sage on the stage” and the result often is a teaching and learning environment that promotes dependency on the instructor. For the earliest years of educational psychology, teachers believed that the best way for their students to master content was through repetition, a principle derived from behavioral learning theory; a notion that dominated educational thinking since the time of Ivan Pavlov and his experiment with animals. Students should spend their time copying spelling words, reiterating historical dates and places, and proving and re-proving mathematical formulas until they ‘learned’ the information. Contemporary behaviorists viewed the environment as the single most important key to successful learning. Environmental factors provided the external stimuli to learning and the consequential behavior that resulted was deemed the response. Stimulus ? response (S ? R) became the formula for teaching in these early years of educational practice that found its place in educational practices up through the 1950’s.

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