LEARNING
Learning can be defined as the permanent change in behaviour due to direct and indirect experience. It means change in behaviour, attitude due to education and training, practice, and experience. It is completed by acquisition of knowledge and skills, which are relatively permanent.
Nature of Learning
Nature of learning means the characteristic features of learning. Learning involves change; it may or may not guarantee improvement. It should be permanent in nature, that is learning is for lifelong.
The change in behaviour is the result of experience, practice, and training. Learning is reflected through behaviour.
Factors Affecting Learning
Learning is based
upon some key factors that decide what changes will be caused by this
experience. The key elements or the major factors that affect learning are
motivation, practice, environment, and mental group.
Coming back to
these factors let us have a look on these factors:
Motivation:
The encouragement, the support one gets to complete a task, to achieve a goal is
known as motivation. It is a very important aspect of learning as it acts gives
us a positive energy to complete a task.
Example:
The coach motivated the players to win the match.
Practice:
We all know that “Practice makes us perfect”. To be a perfectionist or at least
complete the task, it is very important to practice what we have learnt.
Example:
We can be a programmer only when we execute the codes we have written.
Environment:
We learn from our surroundings; we
learn from the people around us. They are of two types of environments –
internal and external.
Example:
A child when at home learns from the family which is an internal environment,
but when sent to school it is an external environment.
Mental group:
It describes our thinking by the group of people we chose to hang out with. In
simple words, we make a group of those people with whom we connect. It can be
for a social cause where people with the same mentality work in the same
direction.
Example:
A group of readers, travellers, etc.
These are the
main factors that influence what a person learns, these are the root level for
our behaviour and everything we do is connected to what we learn.
How
Learning Occurs?
Learning can be
understood clearly with the help of some theories that will explain our
behaviour. Some of the remarkable theories are:
Ø Classical Conditioning Theory
Ø Operant Conditioning Theory
ØSocial Learning Theory
Ø Cognitive Learning Theory
Classical Conditioning Theory
The classical
conditioning occurs when a conditioned stimulus is coupled with an
unconditioned stimulus. Usually, the conditioned stimulus (CS) is an impartial
stimulus like the sound of a tuning fork, the unconditioned stimulus (US) is
biologically effective like the taste of food and the unconditioned response
(UR) to the unconditioned stimulus is an unlearned reflex response like
salivation or sweating.
After this
coupling process is repeated (for example, some learning may already occur
after a single coupling), an individual shows a conditioned response (CR) to
the conditioned stimulus, when the conditioned stimulus is presented alone. The
conditioned response is mostly like the unconditioned response, but unlike the
unconditioned response, it must be acquired through experience and is nearly
impermanent.
Operant
Conditioning Theory
Operant conditioning theory is also known as instrumental conditioning. This theory is a learning process in which behaviour is sensitive to or controlled by its outcomes.
Let’s take an example of a child. A child may learn to open a box to get the candy inside or learn to avoid touching a hot stove. In comparison, the classical conditioning develops a relationship between a stimulus and a behaviour. The example can be further elaborated as the child may learn to salivate at the sight of candy, or to tremble at the sight of an angry parent.
In the 20th century, the study of animal learning was commanded by the analysis of these two sorts of learning, and they are still at the core of behaviour analysis.
Social
Learning Theory
The key assumptions of social learning theory are as follows:
Learning is not exactly behavioural, instead it is a cognitive process that takes place in a social context.
Learning can occur by observing a behaviour and by observing the outcomes of the behaviour (known as vicarious reinforcement).
Learning includes observation, extraction of information from those observations, and making decisions regarding the performance of the behaviour (known as observational learning or modelling). Thus, learning can occur beyond an observable change in behaviour.
Reinforcement plays an important role in learning but is not completely responsible for learning.
The learner is not a passive receiver of information. Understanding, environment, and behaviour all mutually influence each other.
Cognitive Learning Theory
Cognition defines a person’s ideas, thoughts, knowledge, interpretation, understanding about himself and environment.
This theory considers learning as the outcome of deliberate thinking on a problem or situation based upon known facts and responding in an objective and more oriented manner. It perceives that a person learns the meaning of various objects and events and learns the response depending upon the meaning assigned to the stimuli. This theory debates that the learner forms a cognitive structure in memory which stores organized information about the various events that occurs.
Learning
& Organizational Behaviour
An individual’s
behaviour in an organization is directly or indirectly affected by learning.
Example:
Employee skill, manager’s attitude is all learned.
Behaviour
can be improved by following the listed tips:
· Reducing absenteeism by rewarding employees for their fair attendance
· Improving employee discipline by dealing with employee’s undesirable behaviour, drinking at workplace, stealing, coming late, etc. by taking appropriate actions like oral reprimands, written warnings, and suspension.
· Developing
training programs more often to grab the trainees’ attention, provide required
motivational properties etc.
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