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Intro to TEFL 
HUMAN LEARNING 
GROUP I : 
AZIZ, DERRY, HAPPY, ZUL
LEARNING AND TRAINING 
 Learning defines as a process 
of acquiring / getting 
knowledge of a subject or a 
skill by study, experience or 
instruction. 
 Attributes: - result, relatively 
permanent change in behavior 
- Build comprehensive 
understanding 
- lifetime 
 Training is a process of 
shaping into a desire like 
form. (www.ideallearningroup.com) 
 Attributes : - result, 
achievement of clearly stated 
objectives 
- For mastering specific skills 
- Short period of time
LEARNING THEORIES - BEHAVIORIMS 
 1. Pavlov’s Classical Behaviorism / Conditioning 
Learning process consisted of the formation of associations between 
stimuli and reflexive response. 
The conditioned / unconditioned stimulus results the conditioned / 
unconditioned response. 
S R 
2. Skinner’s Operant Conditioning 
Defines as a process to that attempts to modify behavior through the use 
of reinforcement and punishment positive or negative. (learningtheory.com) 
Reinforcement aims at increasing behaviors. 
Punishments aims at decreasing behaviors
LEARNING THEORIES - COGNITIVE 
 3. Ausubel’s Meaningful Learning Theory 
Defines learning as a process of relating new events or 
items into already existing cognitive concepts. 
Meaningful learning opposed to rote learning / 
memorization. 
Systematic forgetting happens when specific items / 
information become progressively less identifiable.
LEARNING THEORIES - CONSTRUCTIVISM 
 4. Rodger’s Humanistic Psychology 
- Goal of education is the facilitation of change and learning 
- Learning how to learn is more important than being taught.. 
- Rodger viewed that teachers should : 
- 1. Become facilitator of learning process 
- 2. Gain trust, acceptance, prizing of others, worthy and 
valuable individual. 
- 3. communicate openly and empathically to students or vice 
versa.
GAGNE’S TYPES OF LEARNING
Signal learning 
An Individual learns to carry out a general conditioned 
response toward a given signal. Usually this response is 
emotional 
e.g. 
Pupil’s reaction when teacher announces that a test 
will be administered. A feeling of fear caused by a 
loud sound. Joy at seeing a likeable toy.
Stimulus-Response Learning 
Skinner’s operant conditioning, also called instrumental response. The 
individual shows a certain Response (R) to a discriminated Stimulus (S). 
Nearly all examples of S-R learning, including vocalization involving 
intentional motor behavior. 
e.g. 
Mastering Response to obtain a reinforcement or reward. 
Children start to learn words by repeating the sounds and 
words of adults.
Psychomotor connection learning 
Often called the learning of skills. This type involves the combining or 
connection of two or more units of S-R learning. The connection is limited 
to the physical and non-verbal sequence. Pre-condition to stabilize the 
connection is that every S-R bond has to be formed before building the 
link. 
e.g. 
Turning the spring of children’s toy. Writing. Running. Catching 
and throwing a ball. The strength of the association learnt 
depends on exercise, past experience and reinforcement.
Verbal association learning 
One form of association. But association between verbal or language units. 
Naming an objects is the easiest connection. In this case, the first S-R 
association involves the observation of the object and the second S-R 
association is achieved when the children name the object. 
e.g. 
Remembering poems, formulae or the alphabet in sequence. 
Individually, this learned behavior is not considered an important 
aim of learning. However as hierarchical level, this association is 
the first step to more important higher levels in learning.
Multiple discrimination learning 
Separate associations which have been learnt are connected to form 
multiple discrimination. Again, preceding associations needed at a lower 
hierarchical level should be learnt earlier. At this level, a person learns 
different responses to different stimuli. Because of this, he learns to 
identify associations which may be confused with objects or phenomena 
resembling each other. 
e.g. 
Recognizing the names of the children in a class. 
Differentiating solids, liquids and gases.
Concept learning 
Concept learning means learning to respond to a stimulus 
according to abstract characteristics such as position, shape, 
color and number and not according to the concrete physical 
characteristics. 
e.g. 
A child learns to call a 5 cm cube a ‘block’ and uses this name for 
other objects that are different in size and shape. Then he learns 
the concepts of cube and with this he can identify a class of objects 
that differ in characteristics such as material, color, texture and 
size.
Principle learning 
A principle is a chain of two or more concepts. In principle 
learning, one needs to associate more than one concept. 
e.g. 
The relationship of the circumference of a circle with its 
diameter. Three concepts: the circumference, pi, and diameter 
are related. Identifying the number of legs to classify 
invertebrate animals.
Problem solving 
In problem solving, a person uses principles that have been learnt to 
achieve an aim. Besides achieving the aim, he acquires the skill to use his 
new knowledge and in time his skill is enhanced. He will be able to handle 
similar problems. What has been learnt is a higher-order principle that 
combines many lower-order principles. 
e.g. 
Experimenting to test the effect of different types of 
fertilizer on plant growth.
TRANSFER 
o The reliance on the prior learning to facilitate new learning 
o The carryover of previous performance or knowledge to subsequent 
learning. 
e.g. 
When children say “I eat a banana” it indicates 
that he does the transfer of rule from Bahasa 
Indonesia to English.
INTERFERENCE 
o Negative transfer 
o When previous performance/knowledge disrupts the 
performance of a second language 
e.g. 
I eat banana yesterday 
I have a car new
OVERGENERALISATION 
Process that occurs as the second language learners act within 
the target language: generating a particular rule or item in the 
second language – irrespective of native language – beyond 
bounds. 
e.g. 
o Overgeneralisation of past verb. All past verb is ended in -ed 
(walked, worked, opened) as applicable in all past verb 
(goed, flied) 
o Overgeneralisation in an uttrance: I was walked
Inductive and Deductive Reasoning 
Inductive and deductive reasoning are two polar aspects of the generalization 
process. 
Inductive reasoning (IR): one stories a number of specific instances and 
induces a general rule that subsumes the specific instances. 
Deductive reasoning (DR): a movement from a generalization to specific 
instances
See the daft below: 
IR Specific General 
DR General Specific 
Both inductive and deductive reasoning can be applied in 
teaching learning process depend on the goal and contexts of 
a particular language teaching situation.
Aptitude and Intelligence 
Aptitude: a natural ability or propensity. (by. Oxford dic.) 
Aptitude is through a historical progression of research that began around the 
middle of the twentieth century with John Carroll’s construction of the Modern 
Language Aptitude Test (MLAT). 
The MLAT required prospective language learners (before they began to learn 
a foreign language) to perform such tasks as learning numbers, listening, 
detecting spelling clues and grammatical patterns, and memorizing, all either in 
the native language, English, or utilizing words and morphemes from a 
constructed, hypothetical language. The MLAT was considered to be 
independent of a specific foreign language, and therefore predictive of success 
in the learning of any language.
 Intelligence has traditionally been defined and measured in terms of linguistic and 
logical mathematical abilities. 
Howard Gardner (1983) advanced a controversial theory of intelligence that blew apart traditional thought about IQ. He 
described seven different forms of intelligence, they are: 
1. Linguistic 
2. logical-mathematical 
3. Spatial (the ability to find one’s way around an environment, to form mental images of reality, and to transform 
them readily) 
4. Musical (the ability to perceive and create pitch and rhythmic patterns) 
5. Bodily-kinesthetic (fine motor movement, athletic prowess) 
6. Interpersonal (the ability to understand others, how they feel, what motivates them, how they interact with one 
another) 
7. Intrapersonal (the ability to see oneself, to develop a sense of self-identity 
In likewise revolutionary style, Robert Sternberg was in his ‘triarchic’ view of intelligence, he proposed three types of 
‘smartness’, they are: 
1. Componential ability for analytical thinking 
2. Experimential ability to engage in creative thinking, combining desperate experiences in insightful ways 
3. Contextual ability: ‘street smartness’ that enables people to ‘play the game’ of manipulating their enveronment 
(others, situations, instirutions, contexts)
THE MOST POPULAR 
METHODS OF THE 1970s
Methods of language teaching include: 
1) Community language learning 
2) Suggestopedia 
3) The silent way 
4) Total physical response 
5) The natural way
Community language learning (CLL) 
 This approach is patterned upon counseling techniques and adapted 
to the peculiar anxiety and threat as well as the personal and 
language problems a person encounters in the learning of foreign 
languages. 
 The learner is not thought of as a student but as a client. 
 The instructors are not considered teachers but, rather are trained in 
counseling skills adapted to their roles as language counselors.
The language-counseling relationship begins with the client's 
linguistic confusion and conflict. 
The aim of the language counselor's skill is first to communicate an 
empathy for the client's threatened inadequate state and to aid him 
linguistically. 
Then slowly the teacher-counselor strives to enable him to arrive at 
his own increasingly independent language adequacy. 
This process is furthered by the language counselor's ability to 
establish a warm, understanding, and accepting relationship, thus 
becoming an "other-language self" for the client.
Suggestopedia 
-This method developed out of believe that human brain could 
process great quantities of material given the right 
conditions of learning like relaxation. 
- music was central to this method. 
- Soft music led to increase in alpha brain wave and a 
decrease in blood pressure and pulse rate resulting in high 
intake of large quantities of materials. 
- Learners were encouraged to be as “childlike” as possible. 
- Apart from soft, comfortable seats in a relaxed setting, 
everything else remained the same.
The Silent Way 
This method begins by using a set of colored wooden rods and 
verbal commands in order to achieve the following: 
1)To avoid the use of the vernacular. 
2)To create simple linguistic situations that remain under the complete 
control of the teacher . 
3)To pass on to the learners the responsibility for the utterances of the 
descriptions of the objects shown or the actions performed. 
4)To let the teacher concentrate on what the students say and how they 
are saying it, drawing their attention to the differences in 
pronunciation and the flow of words.
Total Physical Response (TPR) 
Total Physical Response (TPR) method as one that combines information 
and skills through the use of the kinesthetic sensory system. 
 This combination of skills allows the student to assimilate information and 
skills at a rapid rate. The basic tenets are: 
1) Understanding the spoken language before developing the skills of 
speaking. 
2) Imperatives are the main structures to transfer or communicate 
information. 
3) The student is not forced to speak, but is allowed an individual readiness 
period and allowed to spontaneously begin to speak when the he/she feels 
comfortable and confident in understanding and producing the utterances.
The natural approach 
 This method emphasized development of basic personal 
communication skills 
 Delay production until speech emerge i.e learners don’t say 
anything until they are ready to do so 
 Learners should be as relaxed a possible 
 Advocate use of TPR at beginning level 
 Comprehensible input is essential for acquisition to take 
place.
THANK YOU

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human learning

  • 1. Intro to TEFL HUMAN LEARNING GROUP I : AZIZ, DERRY, HAPPY, ZUL
  • 2. LEARNING AND TRAINING  Learning defines as a process of acquiring / getting knowledge of a subject or a skill by study, experience or instruction.  Attributes: - result, relatively permanent change in behavior - Build comprehensive understanding - lifetime  Training is a process of shaping into a desire like form. (www.ideallearningroup.com)  Attributes : - result, achievement of clearly stated objectives - For mastering specific skills - Short period of time
  • 3. LEARNING THEORIES - BEHAVIORIMS  1. Pavlov’s Classical Behaviorism / Conditioning Learning process consisted of the formation of associations between stimuli and reflexive response. The conditioned / unconditioned stimulus results the conditioned / unconditioned response. S R 2. Skinner’s Operant Conditioning Defines as a process to that attempts to modify behavior through the use of reinforcement and punishment positive or negative. (learningtheory.com) Reinforcement aims at increasing behaviors. Punishments aims at decreasing behaviors
  • 4. LEARNING THEORIES - COGNITIVE  3. Ausubel’s Meaningful Learning Theory Defines learning as a process of relating new events or items into already existing cognitive concepts. Meaningful learning opposed to rote learning / memorization. Systematic forgetting happens when specific items / information become progressively less identifiable.
  • 5. LEARNING THEORIES - CONSTRUCTIVISM  4. Rodger’s Humanistic Psychology - Goal of education is the facilitation of change and learning - Learning how to learn is more important than being taught.. - Rodger viewed that teachers should : - 1. Become facilitator of learning process - 2. Gain trust, acceptance, prizing of others, worthy and valuable individual. - 3. communicate openly and empathically to students or vice versa.
  • 7. Signal learning An Individual learns to carry out a general conditioned response toward a given signal. Usually this response is emotional e.g. Pupil’s reaction when teacher announces that a test will be administered. A feeling of fear caused by a loud sound. Joy at seeing a likeable toy.
  • 8. Stimulus-Response Learning Skinner’s operant conditioning, also called instrumental response. The individual shows a certain Response (R) to a discriminated Stimulus (S). Nearly all examples of S-R learning, including vocalization involving intentional motor behavior. e.g. Mastering Response to obtain a reinforcement or reward. Children start to learn words by repeating the sounds and words of adults.
  • 9. Psychomotor connection learning Often called the learning of skills. This type involves the combining or connection of two or more units of S-R learning. The connection is limited to the physical and non-verbal sequence. Pre-condition to stabilize the connection is that every S-R bond has to be formed before building the link. e.g. Turning the spring of children’s toy. Writing. Running. Catching and throwing a ball. The strength of the association learnt depends on exercise, past experience and reinforcement.
  • 10. Verbal association learning One form of association. But association between verbal or language units. Naming an objects is the easiest connection. In this case, the first S-R association involves the observation of the object and the second S-R association is achieved when the children name the object. e.g. Remembering poems, formulae or the alphabet in sequence. Individually, this learned behavior is not considered an important aim of learning. However as hierarchical level, this association is the first step to more important higher levels in learning.
  • 11. Multiple discrimination learning Separate associations which have been learnt are connected to form multiple discrimination. Again, preceding associations needed at a lower hierarchical level should be learnt earlier. At this level, a person learns different responses to different stimuli. Because of this, he learns to identify associations which may be confused with objects or phenomena resembling each other. e.g. Recognizing the names of the children in a class. Differentiating solids, liquids and gases.
  • 12. Concept learning Concept learning means learning to respond to a stimulus according to abstract characteristics such as position, shape, color and number and not according to the concrete physical characteristics. e.g. A child learns to call a 5 cm cube a ‘block’ and uses this name for other objects that are different in size and shape. Then he learns the concepts of cube and with this he can identify a class of objects that differ in characteristics such as material, color, texture and size.
  • 13. Principle learning A principle is a chain of two or more concepts. In principle learning, one needs to associate more than one concept. e.g. The relationship of the circumference of a circle with its diameter. Three concepts: the circumference, pi, and diameter are related. Identifying the number of legs to classify invertebrate animals.
  • 14. Problem solving In problem solving, a person uses principles that have been learnt to achieve an aim. Besides achieving the aim, he acquires the skill to use his new knowledge and in time his skill is enhanced. He will be able to handle similar problems. What has been learnt is a higher-order principle that combines many lower-order principles. e.g. Experimenting to test the effect of different types of fertilizer on plant growth.
  • 15. TRANSFER o The reliance on the prior learning to facilitate new learning o The carryover of previous performance or knowledge to subsequent learning. e.g. When children say “I eat a banana” it indicates that he does the transfer of rule from Bahasa Indonesia to English.
  • 16. INTERFERENCE o Negative transfer o When previous performance/knowledge disrupts the performance of a second language e.g. I eat banana yesterday I have a car new
  • 17. OVERGENERALISATION Process that occurs as the second language learners act within the target language: generating a particular rule or item in the second language – irrespective of native language – beyond bounds. e.g. o Overgeneralisation of past verb. All past verb is ended in -ed (walked, worked, opened) as applicable in all past verb (goed, flied) o Overgeneralisation in an uttrance: I was walked
  • 18. Inductive and Deductive Reasoning Inductive and deductive reasoning are two polar aspects of the generalization process. Inductive reasoning (IR): one stories a number of specific instances and induces a general rule that subsumes the specific instances. Deductive reasoning (DR): a movement from a generalization to specific instances
  • 19. See the daft below: IR Specific General DR General Specific Both inductive and deductive reasoning can be applied in teaching learning process depend on the goal and contexts of a particular language teaching situation.
  • 20. Aptitude and Intelligence Aptitude: a natural ability or propensity. (by. Oxford dic.) Aptitude is through a historical progression of research that began around the middle of the twentieth century with John Carroll’s construction of the Modern Language Aptitude Test (MLAT). The MLAT required prospective language learners (before they began to learn a foreign language) to perform such tasks as learning numbers, listening, detecting spelling clues and grammatical patterns, and memorizing, all either in the native language, English, or utilizing words and morphemes from a constructed, hypothetical language. The MLAT was considered to be independent of a specific foreign language, and therefore predictive of success in the learning of any language.
  • 21.  Intelligence has traditionally been defined and measured in terms of linguistic and logical mathematical abilities. Howard Gardner (1983) advanced a controversial theory of intelligence that blew apart traditional thought about IQ. He described seven different forms of intelligence, they are: 1. Linguistic 2. logical-mathematical 3. Spatial (the ability to find one’s way around an environment, to form mental images of reality, and to transform them readily) 4. Musical (the ability to perceive and create pitch and rhythmic patterns) 5. Bodily-kinesthetic (fine motor movement, athletic prowess) 6. Interpersonal (the ability to understand others, how they feel, what motivates them, how they interact with one another) 7. Intrapersonal (the ability to see oneself, to develop a sense of self-identity In likewise revolutionary style, Robert Sternberg was in his ‘triarchic’ view of intelligence, he proposed three types of ‘smartness’, they are: 1. Componential ability for analytical thinking 2. Experimential ability to engage in creative thinking, combining desperate experiences in insightful ways 3. Contextual ability: ‘street smartness’ that enables people to ‘play the game’ of manipulating their enveronment (others, situations, instirutions, contexts)
  • 22. THE MOST POPULAR METHODS OF THE 1970s
  • 23. Methods of language teaching include: 1) Community language learning 2) Suggestopedia 3) The silent way 4) Total physical response 5) The natural way
  • 24. Community language learning (CLL)  This approach is patterned upon counseling techniques and adapted to the peculiar anxiety and threat as well as the personal and language problems a person encounters in the learning of foreign languages.  The learner is not thought of as a student but as a client.  The instructors are not considered teachers but, rather are trained in counseling skills adapted to their roles as language counselors.
  • 25. The language-counseling relationship begins with the client's linguistic confusion and conflict. The aim of the language counselor's skill is first to communicate an empathy for the client's threatened inadequate state and to aid him linguistically. Then slowly the teacher-counselor strives to enable him to arrive at his own increasingly independent language adequacy. This process is furthered by the language counselor's ability to establish a warm, understanding, and accepting relationship, thus becoming an "other-language self" for the client.
  • 26. Suggestopedia -This method developed out of believe that human brain could process great quantities of material given the right conditions of learning like relaxation. - music was central to this method. - Soft music led to increase in alpha brain wave and a decrease in blood pressure and pulse rate resulting in high intake of large quantities of materials. - Learners were encouraged to be as “childlike” as possible. - Apart from soft, comfortable seats in a relaxed setting, everything else remained the same.
  • 27. The Silent Way This method begins by using a set of colored wooden rods and verbal commands in order to achieve the following: 1)To avoid the use of the vernacular. 2)To create simple linguistic situations that remain under the complete control of the teacher . 3)To pass on to the learners the responsibility for the utterances of the descriptions of the objects shown or the actions performed. 4)To let the teacher concentrate on what the students say and how they are saying it, drawing their attention to the differences in pronunciation and the flow of words.
  • 28. Total Physical Response (TPR) Total Physical Response (TPR) method as one that combines information and skills through the use of the kinesthetic sensory system.  This combination of skills allows the student to assimilate information and skills at a rapid rate. The basic tenets are: 1) Understanding the spoken language before developing the skills of speaking. 2) Imperatives are the main structures to transfer or communicate information. 3) The student is not forced to speak, but is allowed an individual readiness period and allowed to spontaneously begin to speak when the he/she feels comfortable and confident in understanding and producing the utterances.
  • 29. The natural approach  This method emphasized development of basic personal communication skills  Delay production until speech emerge i.e learners don’t say anything until they are ready to do so  Learners should be as relaxed a possible  Advocate use of TPR at beginning level  Comprehensible input is essential for acquisition to take place.