Behavioral Applied behavior analysis, a research-based science utilizing behavioral principles of
operant conditioning, is effective in a range of educational settings. For example, teachers can alter student behavior by systematically rewarding students who follow classroom rules with praise, stars, or tokens exchangeable for sundry items. Despite the demonstrated efficacy of awards in changing behavior, their use in education has been criticized by proponents of
self-determination theory, who claim that praise and other rewards undermine
intrinsic motivation. There is evidence that tangible rewards decrease intrinsic motivation in specific situations, such as when the student already has a high level of intrinsic motivation to perform the goal behavior. But the results showing detrimental effects are counterbalanced by evidence that, in other situations, such as when rewards are given for attaining a gradually increasing standard of performance, rewards enhance intrinsic motivation. Many effective therapies have been based on the principles of applied behavior analysis, including
pivotal response therapy which is used to treat
autism spectrum disorders.
Cognitive Among current educational psychologists, the cognitive perspective is more widely held than the behavioral perspective, perhaps because it admits causally related mental constructs such as
traits,
beliefs,
memories,
motivations, and
emotions. Cognitive theories claim that memory structures determine how information is
perceived,
processed, stored,
retrieved and
forgotten. Among the memory structures theorized by cognitive psychologists are separate but linked visual and verbal systems described by
Allan Paivio's
dual coding theory. Educational psychologists have used
dual coding theory and
cognitive load theory to explain how people learn from
multimedia presentations. The
spaced learning effect, a
cognitive phenomenon strongly supported by psychological research, has broad applicability within
education. For example, students have been found to perform better on a test of knowledge about a text passage when a second reading of the passage is delayed rather than immediate (see figure).
Problem solving, according to prominent cognitive psychologists, is fundamental to
learning. It resides as an important research topic in educational psychology. A student is thought to interpret a problem by assigning it to a
schema retrieved from
long-term memory. A problem students run into while reading is called "activation." This is when the student's representations of the text are present during
working memory. This causes the student to read through the material without absorbing the information and being able to retain it. When working memory is absent from the reader's representations of the working memory, they experience something called "deactivation." When deactivation occurs, the student has an understanding of the material and is able to retain information. If deactivation occurs during the first reading, the reader does not need to undergo deactivation in the second reading. The reader will only need to reread to get a "gist" of the text to spark their
memory. When the problem is assigned to the wrong schema, the student's attention is subsequently directed away from features of the problem that are inconsistent with the assigned schema. The critical step of finding a mapping between the problem and a pre-existing schema is often cited as supporting the centrality of
analogical thinking to problem-solving.
Cognitive view of intelligence Each person has an individual profile of characteristics, abilities, and challenges that result from predisposition, learning, and development. These manifest as individual differences in
intelligence,
creativity,
cognitive style,
motivation, and the capacity to process information, communicate, and relate to others. The most prevalent disabilities found among school age children are
attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD),
learning disability,
dyslexia, and
speech disorder. Less common disabilities include
intellectual disability,
hearing impairment,
cerebral palsy,
epilepsy, and
blindness. multiple factors (e.g.,
Gardner's theory of multiple intelligences), or whether it can be measured at all. In practice, standardized instruments such as the
Stanford-Binet IQ test and the
WISC are widely used in economically developed countries to identify children in need of individualized educational treatment. Children classified as
gifted are often provided with accelerated or enriched programs. Children with identified deficits may be provided with enhanced education in specific skills such as
phonological awareness. In addition to basic abilities, the individual's personality
traits are also important, with people higher in
conscientiousness and
hope attaining superior academic achievements, even after controlling for intelligence and past performance.
Developmental Developmental psychology, and especially the psychology of cognitive development, opens a special perspective for educational psychology. This is so because education and the psychology of cognitive development converge on a number of crucial assumptions. First, the psychology of cognitive development defines human cognitive competence at successive phases of development. Education aims to help students acquire knowledge and develop skills that are compatible with their understanding and problem-solving capabilities at different ages. Thus, knowing the students' level on a developmental sequence provides information on the kind and level of knowledge they can assimilate, which, in turn, can be used as a frame for organizing the subject matter to be taught at different school grades. This is the reason why
Piaget's theory of cognitive development was so influential for education, especially mathematics and science education. In the same direction, the
neo-Piagetian theories of cognitive development suggest that in addition to the concerns above, sequencing of concepts and skills in teaching must take account of the processing and
working memory capacities that characterize successive age levels. Second, the psychology of
cognitive development involves understanding how
cognitive change takes place and recognizing the factors and processes which enable cognitive competence to develop.
Education also capitalizes on
cognitive change, because the construction of knowledge presupposes effective teaching methods that would move the student from a lower to a higher level of understanding. Mechanisms such as reflection on actual or
mental actions vis-à-vis alternative solutions to problems, tagging new concepts or solutions to symbols that help one recall and mentally manipulate them are just a few examples of how mechanisms of cognitive development may be used to facilitate learning. Finally, the psychology of cognitive development is concerned with individual differences in the organization of cognitive processes and abilities, in their rate of change, and in their mechanisms of change. The principles underlying intra- and inter-individual differences could be educationally useful, because knowing how students differ in regard to the various dimensions of cognitive development, such as processing and representational capacity, self-understanding and self-regulation, and the various domains of understanding, such as mathematical, scientific, or verbal abilities, would enable the teacher to cater for the needs of the different students so that no one is left behind.
Constructivist Constructivism is a category of learning theory in which emphasis is placed on the agency and prior "knowing" and experience of the learner, and often on the social and cultural determinants of the learning process. Educational psychologists distinguish individual (or psychological) constructivism, identified with
Piaget's theory of cognitive development, from
social constructivism. The social constructivist paradigm views the context in which the learning occurs as central to the learning itself. It regards learning as a process of enculturation. People learn by exposure to the culture of practitioners. They observe and practice the behavior of practitioners and 'pick up relevant jargon, imitate behavior, and gradually start to act in accordance with the norms of the practice'. So, a student learns to become a mathematician through exposure to mathematician using tools to solve mathematical problems. So in order to master a particular domain of knowledge it is not enough for students to learn the concepts of the domain. They should be exposed to the use of the concepts in authentic activities by the practitioners of the domain. He cited a famous example to make his case. Two children in school who originally can solve problems at an eight-year-old developmental level (that is, typical for children who were age 8) might be at different developmental levels. If each child received assistance from an adult, one was able to perform at a nine-year-old level and one was able to perform at a twelve-year-old level. He said "This difference between twelve and eight, or between nine and eight, is what we call
the zone of proximal development." Elaborating on Vygotsky's theory,
Jerome Bruner and other educational psychologists developed the important concept of
instructional scaffolding, in which the social or information environment offers supports for learning that are gradually withdrawn as they become internalized.
Jean Piaget's Cognitive Development Jean Piaget was interested in how an organism adapts to its environment. Piaget hypothesized that infants are born with a
schema operating at birth that he called "reflexes". Piaget identified four stages in cognitive development. The four stages are sensorimotor stage, pre-operational stage, concrete operational stage, and formal operational stage. ==Conditioning and learning==