Cognitive Theories of Learning (Entry 3)
As soon as I hear, taste, see, feel, or smell something, my brain/mind immediately begins to make sense of what it is experiencing. Ultimately, Slavin (2020) refers to “the human mind [as] a meaning maker” (p. 127). The information that I take in either remains in my memory for only a small period of time, or it is stored for a much longer time frame. Irrelevant information can instantly be scrapped from my memory, or information can be remembered for a short time then forgotten. Notably, the way in which we absorb information is addressed by cognitive learning theorists, who have coined the information-processing theory. The information-processing theory “...describes the processing, storage, and retrieval of knowledge in the mind” (Slavin, 2020, p. 127). All in all, I feel that I, as an educator, must take into context what all this means for the sake of my students when I present them with content. Whether they learn/retain the material or not is ultimately up to them. My stude...