Professional Documents
Culture Documents
View of Learning: Domain Example
View of Learning: Domain Example
Here is a comprehensive set of objectives for Gagne along with points based on these objectives:
Domain
Definition
Example
Verbal
Information
Naming the three branches of government; describing the rules of a card game; explaining
Freud's theories; listing causes of inflation
Intellectual
Skills
Using discriminations,
concepts, and rules to
solve problems
Distinguishing between different stimuli like recognizing that two musical notes are
different, identifying things that belong in the same category like different types of virus;
applying a rule to determine something like calculating the distance it will take a car to
stop; solving a problem that is new for you such as determining how much paint it will take
to paint the exterior of your house
Motor Skills
Executing body
movements in
coordinated fashion
Playing catch with a baseball; writing your name with a pen; assembling a swing set
Attitude
Choices we make to
behave in certain ways
Choosing to follow proper etiquette when having dinner with new acquaintances; showing
regard for a sick co-worker by offering to help them get their work done; being open to new
ideas by allowing someone to express his suggestion fro accomplishing a work task when it
differs from your suggestion
Cognitive
Strategy
Domain
Conditions
Verbal Information
1.
2.
3.
4.
Intellectual Skills
Motor Skills
Attitude
1. observation of a model who shows the desired choice and is reinforced as a result
2. making the desired choice and receiving direct reinforcement as a result
Cognitive Strategy
3. Describe the information processing view of the act of learning (process) and what is
happening in each of the three memory structures.
In the information processing view of learning a stimulus impacts of learners senses and is brought into his
brain first into this sensory register. There are sensory registers for difference senses such as a visual
sensory register that accepts input from the eyes and an acoustic sensory register that accepts input from
the ears. The information in the sensory register is an exact copy of what impinges our sense organs and
that information resides in the sensory register for a fraction of a second before being lost. If we attend to
the information in our sensory registers while it is there we can transfer some of that information into our
short-term memory thus preventing it from being loss or forgotten. Short-term memory is our conscious
memory in which we process information. Short-term memory is constrained in size in that we can maintain
approximately 7 pieces of information in short-term memory at one time. Fortunately we can overcome
some of the size limitation by grouping pieces of information together to form a larger piece that will still
occupy only one of our slots in short-term memory. In general, information remains in short-term memory
for about 30 seconds before it disappears. We can, however, Keep this information alive in short-term
memory for a longer period of time by reintroducing or rehearsing this information. In essence, we can
restart the 30-second clock by repeating these the information in short-term memory. The information that
we organize and keep holding in short-term memory for longer than 30 seconds has a chance of being
transferred into long-term memory especially when we can relate this new information to information that
already exists in our long-term memory. Long-term memory is considered to be vast, almost unlimited in
size, and permanent. For learning to be effective we need to pay attention to the external stimuli and bring
these into our sensory registers, transfer that into short-term memory where the new information is
organized and meaning is derrived and then organizing the new information and storing it in our long-term
memories where it should reside for a long time. This is a process of information storage. The other side of
this is an equally important process called information retrieval. This is where we go into our long-term
memories searching for something that is stored there, pull it back out into our short-term memories and
then use it to help solve a problem or make meaning of a new situation. This is a complete cycle in the
information processing view of learning.
5. Define sensory register, short-term memory, long-term memory, rehearsal, chunking,
encoding, storage, and retrieval.
These are all terms associated with the information processing view of learning that Gagne used as basis for
much of his work. The sensory register, short-term memory, and long-term memory are the three structures
to human memory. The sensory register holds the direct input from the senses for a brief period time,
milliseconds, before it is lost. The information resides in the sensory register in the same form as the
senses. That is, information that comes from our eyes is stored in the visual sensory register as an image,
information coming from the ears is stored in an acoustic sensory register as sounds. This century registers
are considered to be vast and hold more or less exact copies of the stimuli our senses detect but only for a
very brief period time before they disappear unless they're transferred to short-term memory. Short-term
memory is I working memory that holds about seven pieces of information for about 30 seconds. This gives
us the opportunity to process that information comparing and contrasting it with other information that
resides in a long-term memory and deriving meaning from it. From short-term memory the information that
we focus on and manipulate can be transferred to long-term memory where it is stored permanently in a
vast network of knowledge apparently unlimited in size. We can use several processes in short-term memory
to help improve the chance we will remember something. We can repeat a piece of information to ourselves
thus rehearsing it or restarting the 30-second clock to keep that piece of information alive for a longer
period of time in our short-term memories. We can group the new piece of information with other pieces of
information to form meaningful chunks for storage in long-term memory that will make it easier for us to get
back to that information because it will be more meaningful. Think about chunking in short-term memory as
a process of sorting and grouping information together to form meaningful relationships that are then stored
in long-term memory. Encoding is a process that happens in short-term memory where we are taking the
essence or meaning of the stimulus that comes from the sensory register and dealing with that rather than
with the physical form of the stimulus. As noted earlier, storage is a process of bringing in a stimulus and
placing it in long-term memory while retrieval is a process of going back into long-term memory locating a
piece of information and bringing it back into short-term memory or conscious thought.
6. Describe the proper sequencing of events of learning and the rationale for the sequencing.
As part of his theory Gagne built upon the information processing model by considering what must happen
externally to the learner to facilitate this internal processing of information that goes on during learning.
That is, what can a teacher do to facilitate a student learning new content based on the information
processing model of learning. January identified nine separate things which he called the events of learning
that should happen to optimally facilitate a students internal processing of information. These nine Events of
Learning are:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
Provide Feedback
8.
9.
These Events of Instruction are sequenced in this order because each event impacts the internal processing
of information as we attend to input from our senses, move information into the sensory register, and then
into short-term memory where it is encoded, stored in long-term memory, and finally retrieved or brought
from long-term memory back to short-term.
7. Describe the subcategories of intellectual skills, provide examples of each, and describe the
relationship among the various subcategories.
Intellectual skills are the domain of learning the Gagne placed the most emphasis on in his own work. He
thought that mastery of intellectual skills was fundamental to education and much more important than
learning specific information. There are several subcategories of intellectual skills organize from simple skills
to more complex skills. The ability to master the more complex skills is a direct result of having already
mastered the specific prerequisite lower-level or simpler skills. Think of intellectual skills as arranged in a
hierarchy with the most complex skills at the top.
Intellectual
Skill
Example
Problem Solving
Encountering a new situation in which you have to decide which rules to apply and in what
combination and sequence to resolve a novel problem. Determining how to reduce your
company's energy consumption by 15% next year; figuring out how to raise additional funds for
a charity; determining how much an addition to your home will cost
Rule Learning
Applying a rule, a principle or formula to resolve a situation. Calculating how many miles per
galleon a car got; determining how much change a customer gets from a $8.25 purchase when
he gave you a $10 bill; determining the impact of a 5% increase in mortgage rates on home
ownership
Defined
Concepts
Grouping objects based on a classifying rule. Identifying a country that freely elected its leaders
by popular vote as a democracy; classifying a period of time in which real wages and prices for
goods and services rise as inflationary
Concrete
Concept
Grouping objects based on physical characteristics. Sorting different tree leaves into groups
based on their species; identifying different skin rashes according to the type of rash; classifying
different birds into their types
Discriminations
Telling that two or more stimuli are different. Distinguishing between two different heart sounds
or recognizing that two fish are not the same
Status
Gagne has had considerable influence on education and training in corporate and government sectors as well
as some influence in public schools. A clear contribution of Gagne was the field of instructional design that
seeks to take what is known about human learning and apply it to instruction. He is generally regarded as
the "father" of instructional design. He had wide influence on people who follow a systematic approach to
designing instruction.
Two contributions of Gagne stand out: his ideas about domains of learning and his concept of instructional
events. Educators widely agree that we can't teach all content the identical way. We recognize that teaching
students how to solve problems or use concepts is different from teaching information. This follows directly
from Gagne's domains of learning. Many educators also develop their teaching plans around Gagne's
instructional events by starting lessons by gaining the learners' attention, informing them of the objectives
and continuing through practice and assessment. This is pure Gagne!
Gagne is recognized among educators for his accomplishments and his influences. He holds a lofty status in
the field of instructional design. Many, if not most, corporate training programs are based on his work.