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(Printed) Chapter 3A - Applying Learning Theories To Healthcare Practice

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
457 views4 pages

(Printed) Chapter 3A - Applying Learning Theories To Healthcare Practice

Uploaded by

Chloe Catibud
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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WEEK 3A: APPLYING LEARNING THEORIES TO HEALTHCARE PRACTICE

LEARNING
A. Learning: A relatively permanent change in mental processing, emotional
functioning, and behavior as a result of experience
B. Learning Theory: A coherent framework of integrated constructs and principles
that describe, explain, or predict how people learn.

CONTRIBUTION OF LEARNING THEORIES


✓ Provide information and techniques to guide teaching and learning
✓ Can be employed individually or in combination
✓ Can be applied in a variety of settings as well as for personal growth and
interpersonal relations

Application Questions to Keep in Mind


• How does learning occur?
• What kinds of experiences facilitate or hinder the process?
• What helps ensure that learning becomes permanent?

• BEHAVIORIST THEORY
– Concepts: stimulus conditions, reinforcement, response, drive
– To change behavior, change the stimulus conditions in the environment and the
reinforcement after a response.

Behaviorist Dynamics
➢ Motivation: drives to be reduced, incentives
➢ Educator: active role; manipulates environmental stimuli and reinforcements to
direct change
➢ Transfer: practice and provide similarity in stimulus conditions and responses with
a new situation

a. Respondent Conditioning/ Classical Conditioning/ Pavlovian – Ivan Pavlov


• Learning occurs as the organism responds to stimulus conditions and forms associations.
• A neutral stimulus is paired with an unconditioned stimulus–unconditioned response
connection until the neutral stimulus becomes a conditioned stimulus that elicits the
conditioned response.

b. Operant Conditioning – B.F Skinner (Burrhus Frederic Skinner)


• Learning occurs as the organism responds to stimuli in the environment and is reinforced
for making a particular response.
• A reinforcer is applied after a response, strengthening the probability that the response
will be performed again under similar conditions.

Changing Behavior Using Operant Conditioning


• To increase behavior – Positive reinforcement – Negative reinforcement (escape or
avoidance conditioning)
• To decrease behavior – Nonreinforcement – Punishment

• COGNITIVE THEORY
– Concepts: cognition, gestalt, perception, developmental stage, information
processing, memory, social constructivism, social cognition, attributions
– To change behavior, work with the developmental stage and change cognitions,
goals, expectations, equilibrium, and ways of processing information.

Cognitive Dynamics
➢ Motivation: goals, expectations, disequilibrium, cultural and group values
➢ Educator: organize experiences and make them meaningful; encourage insight and
reorganization within learner
➢ Transfer: focus on internal processes and provide common patterns with a new
situation

NCM 102 : HEALTH EDUCATION


S.Y. 2020- 2021
CABRILLOS, JC
a. Gestalt Perspective
• Perception and the patterning of stimuli (gestalt) are the keys to learning, with each
learner perceiving, interpreting, and reorganizing experiences in her/his own way.
• Learning occurs through the reorganization of elements to form new insights and
understanding.

b. Information-Processing Perspective
• The way individuals perceive, process, store, and retrieve information from experiences
determines how learning occurs and what is learned.
• Organizing information and making it meaningful aids the attention and storage process;
learning occurs through guidance, feedback, and assessing and correcting errors.

c. Cognitive Development Perspective


• Learning depends on the stage of cognitive functioning, with qualitative, sequential
changes in perception, language, and thought occurring as children and adults interact with
the environment.
• Recognize the developmental stage and provide appropriate experiences to encourage
discovery.

d. Social Constructivist Perspective


• Learning is heavily influenced by the culture and occurs as a social process in interaction
with others.
• A person’s knowledge may not necessarily reflect reality, but through collaboration and
negotiation, new understanding is acquired.

e. Social Cognition Perspective


• An individual’s perceptions, beliefs, and social judgments are affected strongly by social
interaction, communication, groups, and the social situation.
• Individuals formulate causal explanations to account for behavior that have significant
consequences for their attitudes and actions (attribution theory).

• SOCIAL LEARNING THEORY


– Concepts: role modeling, vicarious reinforcement, self-system, selfregulation
– To change behavior, utilize effective role models who are perceived to be rewarded,
and work with the social situation and the learner’s internal selfregulating
mechanisms.

Social Learning Dynamics


➢ Motivation: compelling role models perceived to be rewarded, self-system
regulating behavior, self-efficacy
➢ Educator: model behavior and demonstrate benefits; encourage active learner to
regulate and reproduce behavior
➢ Transfer: similarity of setting, feedback, self-efficacy, social influences

• PSYCHODYNAMIC LEARNING THEORY


– Concepts: stage of personality development, conscious and unconscious motivations,
ego-strength, emotional conflicts, defense mechanisms
– To change behavior, work to make unconscious motivations conscious, build ego-
strength, and resolve emotional conflicts.

Psychodynamic Dynamics
➢ Motivation: libido, life force, death wish, pleasure principle, reality principle,
conscious and unconscious conflicts, developmental stage, defenses
➢ Educator: reflective interpreter; listen and pose questions to stimulate insights
➢ Transfer: remove barriers such as resistance, transference reactions, and emotional
conflicts

NCM 102 : HEALTH EDUCATION


S.Y. 2020- 2021
CABRILLOS, JC
• HUMANISTIC LEARNING THEORY
– Learning occurs on the basis of a person’s motivation, derived from needs, the
desire to grow in positive ways, self-concept, and subjective feelings.
– Learning is facilitated by caring facilitators and a nurturing environment that
encourage spontaneity, creativity, emotional expression, and positive choices.
– One of the best-known humanistic theorists is Abraham Maslow (1954, 1987), who
identified a hierarchy of needs to explain human motivation.

Humanist Dynamics
➢ Motivation: needs, desire to grow, self-concept
➢ Educator: act as facilitator who respects learner’s uniqueness and provides freedom
to feel, express, and grow creatively
➢ Transfer: positive or negative feelings and choices as well as freedom to learn,
promote, or inhibit transfer

NEUROPSYCHOLOGY AND LEARNING


• Physiological and neurological bases of thinking, learning, and behavior
• Neurological conditions, mental health issues, and learning disabilities
• Relationship between stress and learning
• Integration of learning theories

Generalizations about Learning


✓ Learning is a function of physiological and neurological developmental changes.
✓ Brain processing is different for each learner.
✓ Learning is active, multifaceted, and complex.
✓ Meaningful practice strengthens learning connections.
✓ Stress can interfere with or stimulate learning.

MOTOR LEARNING
– Is defined as “a set of processes associated with practice or experience leading to
relatively permanent changes in the capability for movement.
– Motor learning is useful in addition to theories of psychological learning.
– Examples of skills taught – Walking – Putting on a colostomy bag – Operating
sophisticated medical equipment

Fitts and Posner’s (1967) Stages of Motor Learning


❖ Cognitive stage – Learner works to develop cognitive map
❖ Associative stage – More consistent performance, slower gains, fewer errors
❖ Autonomous stage – Automatic stage, achieving advanced level

Motor Learning Variables


a. Practice
– Motivation, attention, goal setting, modeling, demonstrations
– Massed vs. distributed, variability, whole versus part, random vs. blocked,
guidance vs. discovery learning
b. Feedback
– Intrinsic (inherent) feedback
– Sensory and perceptual information that arises when a movement is produced
– Extrinsic (augmented or enhanced feedback)
– Provided to learner from outside source (nurse, biofeedback)

Common Principles of Learning


• Promoting change
– Relate to what learner knows and is familiar with
– Keep experiences simple, organized, and meaningful
– Motivate learner (deprivation, goals, disequilibrium, needs, tension)
– May need incentives and rewards, but not always
– Experiences must be at the appropriate developmental level
– Make learning pleasurable, not painful
– Demonstrate by guidance and attractive role models

NCM 102 : HEALTH EDUCATION


S.Y. 2020- 2021
CABRILLOS, JC
• Making learning relatively permanent
– Relate experiences to learner
– Reinforce behavior Rehearse and practice in variety of settings
– Have learner perform and give constructive feedback
– Make sure interference does not occur before, during, or after learning
– Promote transfer
– Have learner mediate and act on experience in some way (visualize, memory
devices, discuss, talk, discuss, write, motor movement)

State of the Research Evidence


– Tests and modifies theories, methods, and assumptions
– Challenges conventional wisdom and myths
– Interdisciplinary focus is beneficial
– Lack of resources is hindrance

Reference:
▪ Bastable, Susan. Nurse as an Educator. Principles of Teaching and Learning for
Nursing Practice. Massachussetts: Jones and Barlett. 5t h edition © 2019

NCM 102 : HEALTH EDUCATION


S.Y. 2020- 2021
CABRILLOS, JC

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