Chapter 5 Asl 2
Chapter 5 Asl 2
Chapter 5 Asl 2
AFFE C T I V E
L E ARN I N G
C O M PET E N C I E S
IMPORTANCE OF AFFECTIVE TARGETS
• Researches have established the clear link between affect and
cognitive learning (Ormrod, 2004). Students are more proficient in
problem-solving if they enjoy what they do. Too much anxiety
obstructs learning, and greater motivation is necessary for
maximum performance. A more positive environment fosters good
student engagement and learning than in a classroom with negative
climate (Fraster, 1994).
• Though the linkage of affect and learning of students has
been well-established, there remains very little systematic
assessment of affect that is applied in classroom instruction.
(McMillan, Workman &Myran 1998); Stiggins & Conklin, 1992)
IMPORTANCE OF AFFECTIVE TARGETS
• Cognitive subject matter targets are agreed on as desirable for all
students. This places affect in a position of importance but still
secondary to cognitive learning. It also makes difficult to
determine which affective targets are appropriate for all students.
It is simply easy to define attitudes, values, and interests.
• The second possible reason is that many potential sources of
error in measuring affective traits often result in low reliability.
POSITIVE AFFECTIVE TRAITS AND SKILLS ARE
ESSENTIAL FOR:
• Effective learning
• Being an involved and productive member of society
• Preparing for occupational and vocational satisfaction and
productivity (example: work habits, willingness to learn,
interpersonal skills)
• Maximizing the motivation to learn at present and in the
future
• Preventing students from dropping out of school
AFFECTIVE TRAITS AND LEARNING TARGETS
Characteristics Description
Affiliation The extent to which student like and
accept each other
Involvement The extent to which students are
interested in and engaged in learning
Task orientation The extent to which classroom
activities are focused on the
completion of academic tasks
Cohesiveness The extent to which students share
norms and expectations
Competition The emphasis on competition
between students
Favoritism Whether each student enjoys the
same privileges
CLASSROOM ENVIRONMENT TARGETS
Characteristics Description
Influence The extent to which each student
influences classroom decisions
Friction The extent to which students bicker
with one another
Formality The emphasis on imposing rules
Communication The extent to which communication
among students and with teacher is
honest and authentic
warmth The extent to which students care
about each other and show concern
AFFECTIVE DOMAIN OF THE TAXONOMY OF EDUCATION
OBJECTIVES
Description Example
Level
Receivin Concerned with students sensitivity to the existence Students does
g of certain phenomena and stimuli, that is, with mathematics
(attendin students willingness to receive or to attend to this activities for grade
g) stimuli.
It is categorized in three subdivisions that shows
the different levels of attending to phenomena:
1. Awareness of the phenomena
2. Willingness to receive the phenomena
3. Controlled or selected attention to phenomena
AFFECTIVE DOMAIN OF THE TAXONOMY OF EDUCATION
OBJECTIVES
Level Description Example
Description Example
Level
Valuing Reflects the students holding Student actively
of a particular importance or and consistently
value. participates in the
Students display behavior discussion and
with sufficient consistency in interestingly
appropriate situations that are answers all the
perceived as holding this activities in
value mathematics.
AFFECTIVE DOMAIN OF THE TAXONOMY OF EDUCATION
OBJECTIVES
Description Example
Level
Organizing Students successively Students
internalize values, they integrates the
encounter situations in which lessons
more than one value is relevant. learned in
This requires the necessity of math and
organizing their values into a science
system such that certain values
exercise greater control.
AFFECTIVE DOMAIN OF THE TAXONOMY OF EDUCATION
OBJECTIVES
Level Description Example
Characterizin Internalization has taken Students
g by a value place in an individuals value applies the
or value hierarchy to the extent that lessons
complex he or she can be learned in
characterized as holding a mathematics
particular value or set of in daily
values. activities such
buying,
cooking, and
others.