21
Presented by Doreen D’Amico

Age and Learning Presentation

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

This presentation explores some of the ways in which cognitive styles intersect with learning throughout the life span.

Citation preview

Page 1: Age and Learning Presentation

Presented by Doreen D’Amico

Page 2: Age and Learning Presentation

Needs

Learn

Change

Page 3: Age and Learning Presentation

Learning Style

Preference

Motivation

Auditory Ability

Memory

Visual Ability

Page 4: Age and Learning Presentation

3 Months

Babies have recognition memory, i.e. toys

6 Years

Memory strategies begin, i.e. telling a story

Early Teens

Working memory evolves into storing and building

Page 5: Age and Learning Presentation

18-25 Years

Critical Thinking Develops Rapidly

22-35 Years

Full Brain Development

Occurs

25- 30 Years

Critical

Thinking

Peaks

Page 6: Age and Learning Presentation

Practical

(Sensible)

Personal

(Significant)

“Stickiness”

of

Information

Page 7: Age and Learning Presentation

Stabilizes

Thinking

Critical

Page 8: Age and Learning Presentation

1960

69.8 Years

2008

78.4 Years

2050

82.6 Years

Page 9: Age and Learning Presentation

Children

Kinesthetic Tactile Visual Auditory

Adolescents

Page 10: Age and Learning Presentation

College-age Freshmen

Abstract Approaches

College-age Seniors

Concrete Approaches

Page 11: Age and Learning Presentation

Traditional-age College Students

Kinesthetic

Hands-on experience

Listening

Reading

Non-traditional age College Students

Page 12: Age and Learning Presentation
Page 13: Age and Learning Presentation

Acquisition

• Birth through adolescence

• Acquiring basic learning abilities

Specialization• Early adulthood, formal education , career

training

• Primary time for forming style

Integration

• Mid-career to older adulthood

• Non-dominant styles develop

Page 14: Age and Learning Presentation

Approach a Problem

Learn a New Skill

Training & Retraining

Intellectual Stimulation

Social Connections

Page 15: Age and Learning Presentation

Hearing Loss

Higher Sound

Frequencies

Consonant Sounds

Distinguish Speech from

Background Noise

Page 16: Age and Learning Presentation

Loss of Visual Acuity

Inhibits Night

Driving

Inhibits Reading

Page 17: Age and Learning Presentation
Page 18: Age and Learning Presentation

Observed (MMPALT II)

Visual

Interactive

Print

Interactive

Aural

Preferred (PMPS)

Page 19: Age and Learning Presentation

• Accommodator

• Feeling & Doing55-65

Years Old

• Diverger

• Feeling & Watching

66-74

Years Old

• Assimilator

• Thinking & Watching75 Years and Up

Page 20: Age and Learning Presentation

“People can change, and those changes –not just the accumulation of

information - represent true learning.”

(Bain, 2004).

Page 21: Age and Learning Presentation

Bain, K. (2004). What the best college teachers do. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.

Brown, B. F. (1984). A descriptive analysis of perceptual modality learning styles in older adults.(Unpublished doctoral dissertation.) Oklahoma State University, OK. OCLC Number: 19099190.

Manheimer, R.J. (2007). Allocating Resources for Lifelong Learning for Older Adults. In R.A.Pruchno & M.A. Smyer (Eds.), Challenges of an aging society: ethical dilemmas, political issues. (pp. 217-237). Baltimore, MD: The John Hopkins University Press.

Sprenger, M. B. (2007). Becoming a “Wiz” at brain-based teaching: How to make every yearyour best year. (2nd ed.). Thousand Oaks, CA: Corwin Press.

Truluck, J.E. & Courtenay, B.C. (1999). Adults. Educational Gerontology, 25. 221-236. doi: 0360-1277/99.

World Development Indicators, The World Bank. (2011) Retrieved from http://data.worldbank.org/data-catalog/world-development-indicators?cid=GPD_WDI.