Teoría del aprendizaje de Gagné
Robert Gagné's Learning Theory
Overview of Robert Gagné
- Robert Gagné was an American psychologist and educator, born on August 21, 1916, in Massachusetts and passed away on April 28, 2012.
- His learning theory is eclectic, integrating cognitive and behavioral elements to create a comprehensive framework for understanding how individuals learn.
Key Components of the Learning Process
- Gagné describes learning as a sequence of processes essential for individual development. He emphasizes the importance of adapting instruction to meet each student's needs.
- The theory outlines various stages: sensory registration, short-term memory processing, long-term memory encoding based on existing knowledge or strong external motivation.
Phases of Learning According to Gagné
- The eight phases include:
- Motivation: Setting expectations for learners.
- Apprehension: Focusing attention on specific tasks.
- Acquisition: Encoding information into memory.
- Retention: Storing information in long-term memory.
- Recovery: Recalling learned information.
- Generalization: Applying knowledge across different contexts.
- Performance: Verifying understanding through application.
- Feedback: Identifying gaps in knowledge for reinforcement.
Types of Learnable Skills
- Gagné identifies several capabilities that can be learned:
- Motor skills (e.g., driving).
- Verbal information (e.g., names and facts).
- Intellectual skills (e.g., applying rules and concepts).
- Attitudes influencing personal actions.
- Cognitive strategies (e.g., attention control).
Domains and Types of Learning
- He categorizes learning into eight types:
- Signal learning (responses to signals).
- Stimulus-response learning (cause-effect relationships).
- Chaining (connecting sequences of stimuli/responses).
- Verbal association (learning truth sequences).
- Multiple discrimination (identifying differences/similarities).
- Concept learning (categorizing objects).
- Principle learning (unchangeable rules like multiplication tables).
- Problem-solving using acquired knowledge.
Application in Education