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AOE 2. Instructional Design; 2.2. Learning Theories

Learning Objectives for Section 2.2.

The Role of Adult Learning Theories in Instructional Design

Learning theories explain why some training techniques may work better than others; and this helps talent development professionals design effective learning solutions. Trainers help improve performance by facilitating learning in a traditional or virtual classroom, one-on-one, or on-the-job in an organization. Knowledge of adult learning theories help talent development professionals to:

Theories of Learning and Memory:

This is the HOW learners internalize information and identifies ways to increase the successful transfer of learning for retention. Essentially it will be to understand how humans access, treat, and retrieve information with these three classic learning theories:

  1. Behaviorism: concerned with the relationship between stimuli and response to predict and control behavior; advantages:
    • Establishes objectives that are clear and unmistakable
    • Ensures behavioral practice, not just theory
    • Works best for helping learners to acquire behavioral skills
    • Is highly specific
    • Is observable (learners know when they have succeeded)
  2. Cognitivism: focuses on what is happening to the learning internally; trying to “understand understanding” specifically how people perceive, think, remember, learn, solve problems, and attend to one stimulus over another; advantages:
    • Treats people as adults
    • Focuses on thinking skills
    • Emphasizes foundational knowledge 
    • Builds a base of information, concepts, and rules
    • Provides the rationale upon which action is based
  3. Constructivism: the focus is on how learners internalize what they learn; advantages:
    • Is discovery orient
    • Centers on learner understanding
    • Builds learner understanding with real-world relevance
    • Allows for differences in learner backgrounds and experiences
    • Has facilitators guide learners through the learning process

READ MORE: Epistemology and theories of learning; Objectivism and behaviorism; Cognitivism and Constructivism from Chapter 2: The nature of knowledge and implications for teaching by Tony Bates

Maslow’s HIerarchy of Needs: explains the foundations of motivation and offer a logical leveling from physiological to psychological needs:

  1. Physiological
  2. Safety
  3. Belongingness
  4. Esteem
  5. Self-Actualization

READ: Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs Explained

Malcom Knowles’s Adult Learning, or Andragogy: the way adults learn are different from children; often more self-directed, internally motivated, and ready to learn; unlike pedagogy (traditional style of teaching based on lecturing or a didactic model), this is learner-centered rather than content-centred or instructor-led.

READ: Andragogy - Adult Learning Theory (Knowles)

Andragogy (Knowles, 1984): contends that five key principles affect the ways adults learn: 

  1. Self-concept of the learner:
  2. Prior experience of the learner
  3. Readiness to learn
  4. Orientation to learning
  5. Motivation to learn

Individual Characteristics of Learning: adults learn only when they need or want to learn, no matter how good the talent development professional or training experience is -- here are the four key characteristics of learning:

  1. Motivation
  2. Goals
  3. Experience
  4. Culture

Approaches to Motivating Learners: 4 foundational principles to motivate adult learners are:

  1. Inclusion
  2. Attitude
  3. Meaning
  4. Competence

How Culture May Influence Learning: this might impact the training experience and ability for participants to learn, specifically related to these differences:

Questions the learning designer should ask before developing training:

Adult Development and Age: Does our learning change or capacity to learn change as we age? Not necessarily. Neuroplasticity, the ability of our brains to change and adapt, does not decline with age. We are able to continually learn, adapt, and grow -- this includes building new neural connections to receive, process, and transmit information. Confronting ideas that are contrary to one’s own helps to stimulate the development of new neural pathways -- keep adult learning programs going!


The Whole Brain Thinking Model
: we use the whole brain (both sides/hemispheres) to process information. These are complementary, not competitive to make a decision, analyze a problem, compare solutions, and support long-term learning. The left side of the brain is associated with time orientation; sequential processing of events; language; logic; mathematics; analysis; and awareness of cause and effect. The right side of the brain spe...