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10 Learning Theories You HAVE To Know!

Growth Engineering

Learning theories are sets of principles that explain how we best absorb information over time. Here are the 10 learning theories that you have you to know! The post 10 Learning Theories You HAVE To Know! appeared first on Growth Engineering.

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Top 3 Instructional Design Interview Tips

Ashley Chiasson

Most Instructional Design interviews I’ve been a part of ask questions related to learning theories, Instructional Design processes, and instructional strategies. Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs. Behaviourism/Cognitivism/Constructivism. Behaviourism/Cognitivism/Constructivism. Rapid Prototyping/Storyboarding. Have a Portfolio.

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Clark is not Keen

Learning with e's

He began by debunking many of the established and commonly accepted learning theories espoused by the likes of Benjamin Bloom (Taxonomy), Robert Gagne (Stages model) and Abraham Maslow (Hierarchy of needs). Glib, perhaps, but also inherently true when faced with the oversimplification of Maslow's model.

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What is Instructional Design? Our Guide to Everything you Need to Know

Growth Engineering

What Learning Theories Should you Know? What are the Big Learning Theories you Need to Know? Bloom’s Taxonomy. Bloom’s Taxonomy is a model which categorises different skills into a hierarchy. Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs. Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs is a pyramid which explains human motivations. The Solution?

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Donald Clark on training departments…

Jay Cross's Informal Learning

I argued that training is mired in old, faddish theory; Bloom, Gagne, Maslow, Kirkpatrick – train the trainer courses are still full of old behaviourist theory (killed stone dead by Chomsky in 1959) trapping us in 50 year old theories that holds the industry back.

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Maturity Models and the Learning Organization

CrossKnowledge

From Maslow to Kirkpatrick: The Pioneers of the Maturity Model. One famous model at the origin of this approach is Maslow’s hierarchy of needs , often presented in the form of a pyramid. From this, he derived a theory of motivation. Bloom’s taxonomy. Maturity models have a unique history. See infographic.

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