Q-Factor HISPOL Quiz-6th April 2024, Quiz Club NITW
Ausubel meaninful learning
1. The theory of meaningful
learning
Presenter:
Ma. Sonia Calderon Cruz
2.
3. David P. Ausubel was born in 1918
Grew up in Brooklyn, NY
Attended the University of Pennsylvania, taking
the pre-medical course and majoring in
Psychology
In 1973 he retired from academic life to devote full time to his
psychiatric practice
In 1976 he received the Thorndike Award from the American
Psychological Association for "Distinguished Psychological
Contributions to Education".
4. Introduction
-Supported the theory that pupils form & organise
knowledge by themselves
-Emphasized the importance of verbal learning /
language-related learning which he consider to be very
effective for pupils of the age 11 or 12 & above
5. -Pupils gradually learn to associate new knowledge with
existing concepts in their mental structures
-To ensure meaningful teaching, necessary to avoid rote
memorising of facts. Pupils need to manipulate ideas
actively
6. Advance Organizer
-Presents an overview of the information to be
covered in detail during the exposition that follows
-Can be classified : exposition or comparison type
7. Advance Organizer of the
Exposition Type
-While presenting new material
-Use beginning of lesson
-Presents several encompassing generalizations
where detailed contents will be added later
8. Advance Organizer of the Comparison
Type
-Useful when the knowledge to be presented is new
to pupils
-Compares new material with knowledge already
known by emphasising the similarities between 2
types of material & showing the information that
is to be learnt
-Ausubel’s teaching approach is deductive in nature
9. Step 3:The teacher presents
examples
Step 4:The pupils study
specific examples
ADVANCE ORGANIZER
GENERAL
SPECIFIC
Step 2:The teacher explains
important terms
Step 1:The teacher presents
general statement or
abstraction of lesson
Deductive Teaching Model: Advance Organizer as the basis
of the lesson
11. Meaningful
Reception Learning
Theory
Meaningful
Reception Learning
Theory
A concerned with how students
learn large amounts of
meaningful material from
verbal/textual presentations in
a learning activities
Learning is based on the
representational,
superordinate and
combinatorial processes that
occur during the reception of
information.
A primary process in learning is
subsumption in which new
material is related to relevant
ideas in the existing cognitive
structure on a non-verbatim
basis (previous knowledge)
Meaningful learning results
when new information is
acquired by linking the new
information in the learner's own
cognitive structure
12.
13. The processes of meaningful
learning
Ausubel proposed four processes by which
meaningful learning can occur :
Derivative subsumption
Correlative subsumption
Superordinate learning
Combinatorial learning
14. Derivative subsumption
• Describes the situation in which the new information pupils learn is
an instance or example of a concept that pupils have already learned
Example (Stage 1) :
PREVIOUS KNOWLEDGE : Let's suppose Ali have
acquired a basic concept such as "tree” – have green
leave, branch, fruits
Ali learn about a kind of tree that he have
never seen before “persimmon tree” - conforms
to his previous understanding of “tree’’
His new knowledge of persimmon trees is
attached to the concept of tree, without
substantially altering that concept in any way
15. Correlative subsumption
more "valuable" learning than that of derivative subsumption,
since it enriches the higher-level concept
Example (Stage 2) :
•Now, let's suppose Ali encounter a new
kind of tree that has red leaves, rather than
green
• Accommodate this new information Ali
have to alter or extend your concept of
“tree’’ to include the possibility of red leaves
16. Superordinate learning
In this case, you already knew a lot of examples of the concept,
but you did not know the concept itself until it was taught to
pupils.
Example (Stage 3) :
• Ali was well acquainted with maples, oaks,
apple trees etc., but pupils still did not know,
until they were taught that these were all
examples of deciduous trees
17. Combinatorial learning
• It describes a process by which the new idea is derived from another
idea that is comes from his previous knowledge (in a different, but
related, "branch")
• Students could think of this as learning by analogy
Example (Stage 3) :
•Ali learn about modification on the plants
part, Ali might relate it to previously acquired
knowledge of how papyrus tree used to
produce paper
18. • General ideas of a subject (general statement):
– Must be presented first
– then progressively differentiated in terms of detail and
specificity.
• Instructional materials :
– should attempt to integrate new material with previously
presented information
– Using comparisons and cross-referencing of new and
old ideas.
Principles of Ausubel's
Meaningful Reception
Learning Theory within a
classroom setting
Principles of Ausubel's
Meaningful Reception
Learning Theory within a
classroom setting
19. • Advance organizers :
– Instructors should incorporate advance organizers
when teaching a new concept
• Examples :
– Instructors should use a number of examples and focus
on both similarities and differences.
Principles of Ausubel's
Meaningful Reception
Learning Theory within a
classroom setting
Principles of Ausubel's
Meaningful Reception
Learning Theory within a
classroom setting
20. The most important single factor
influencing learning is what the
learner already knows..