Module 5 Faci
Module 5 Faci
Module 5 Faci
Module No. 5
Unit 5- Integration
MODULE OVERVIEW
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
LEARNING CONTENTS
Over time, with assistance and instructional supervision, a successful learner can construct
meaningful, coherent representations of knowledge.
3. Construction of Knowledge
A successful learner may make meaningful connections between new material and previous
knowledge. As students continue to make connections between new information and
experiences and their existing knowledge base, their knowledge expands and deepens.
4. Strategic Thinking
To attain complicated learning goals, a successful learner can develop and employ a repertoire of
thinking and reasoning skills. In their approach to learning, successful learners use reasoning,
problem solving, and concept learning.
5. Thinking about thinking
Successful learners can examine how they think and learn, set realistic learning or performance
goals, choose possibly appropriate learning tactics or methods, and track their progress toward
these objectives.
6. Context of Learning
Environmental elements, such as culture, technology, and instructional approaches, have an
impact on learning.
The learner’s rich internal world of thoughts, beliefs, aspirations, and expectations for success or
failure can either improve or hinder his or her ability to think and process information.
8. Intrinsic motivation to learn
Intrinsic motivation is sparked by tasks that are both unique and challenging, relevant to
personal interests, and allow for personal choice and control.
9. Effects of motivation on effort
When a learner gets the opportunity to communicate and work with others on instructional
assignments, their learning is boosted.
Individuals are born with their own traits and talents, which they develop over time. Educators
must assist students in examining their learning preferences and, if required, expanding or
modifying them.
13. Learning and diversity
All learners share the same core principles of learning, motivation, and effective instruction. 14.
Standards and assessment
At every level of the learning process, assessment gives crucial information to both the learner
and the teacher.
LEARNING POINTS
The learner and the learning process are addressed by the 14 psychological principles.
Rather than conditioned habits or physiological causes, they concentrate on psychological
elements that are essentially internal to and under the control of the learner. The principles, on
the other hand, attempt to take into account the external environment or contextual elements
that interact with these internal components. The concepts are designed to deal with learners
holistically in real-world learning contexts. As a result, they're best comprehended as a collection
of principles; no one premise should be considered in isolation. The 14 principles are organized
into four categories that influence learners and learning: cognitive and metacognitive,
motivational and affective, developmental and social, and individual differences. Finally, the
principles are designed to apply to all learners in our educational system, including children,
teachers, administrators, parents, and community members.
LEARNING ACTIVITIES
REFERENCE
APA Work Group of the Board of Educational Affairs (1997, November). Learner-centered
psychological principles: A framework for school reform and redesign. Washington, D.C.:
American Psychological Association.