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Summary 8.6

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Summary for block 1.8 at Erasmus university (). I'm enrolled in international psychology, however the sources and study materials are the same in both psychology courses. Hence, these summaries may also be useful for Dutch students. The summaries are based on at least 2 of the required reading materials. For this course my final grade was a 9.7. Therefore, I hope they will be of assistance in preparation for your exams. (we only had 7 problems last year)

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June 4, 2020
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Written in
2018/2019
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Summary #6 Transfer
= learning something in 1 situation that affects learning in other situations

 Not literally reproducing in same situation, but adjusted and focussed use of prior
information in situations in which it may also be relevant

Transfer can happen across various dimension
- Across physical contexts (School  real world)
- Across subjects
- Across social situations
- Across functions
- Across time periods
 applying knowledge and skills beyond where, when and how you learnt them.

Ultimate goal in education should be
 transference of school information/knowledge to real-life (DOESN’T HAPPEN regularly)
 superficial knowledge makes transfer hard
 dissimilar context make transfer + complex

Types of transfer
- Negative transfer
= Knowledge that inhibits performance on transfer task.
- Positive transfer
= knowledge that promotes performance on transfer task
- Vertical transfer
= knowledge that has to be build up hierarchically
- Lateral transfer
= prior knowledge is not necessary, but can be helpful for understanding transfer task
- Specific transfer
= transfer between 2 overlapping situations
e.g.; dog anatomy helps understand human anatomy
- general/generic transfer
= original and transfer tasks have different contexts
e.g.; practicing Greeks requires discipline which generalizes across domains.
- Mixed transfer
= when a specific situation generalizes or when general knowledge transfers to a
specific situation.

Forms of specific transfer:
- Near transfer
= transfer across closely related contexts (+ Common) and underlying principles
e.g.; how to drive a car VS. how to drive a truck
- Far transfer
= different surface manifestations of task but similar underlying principles
e.g. radiation + fortress

, - Low road transfer/reflexive transfer
= Transfer that happens because a stimulus is similar to the original stimulus
presented whilst learning  brings about a basic automated response
 Near transfer
- High road transfer/mindful transfer
= actively looking for connection between two situations (mindful about underlying
abstract principles) deciding what previously learned course of action fits this new
situation
 Thoughtful transfer
a. Initial learning (by mindful abstraction)
b. Reusing & applying
Theories of transfer (increasing in modernity)
1. Formal discipline
= idea that the brain is a muscle that can be trained. Thus learning in general
transfers to other domains.
 attempts to account for general transfer
 mixed results (e.g.; no better at learning after learning many poems, but more post-
mortem neural connections in nuns who trained their minds extensively)

2. Thorndike’s Identical elements (behaviorist)
= idea that transfer only occurs when 2 domains have similar characteristics
 accounts for specific transfer
 about association between stimuli and leanerd responses = behaviorist

3. Similarity of stimuli and responses (behaviors)
= idea that transfer is affected by similarities between stimuli and response across
domains
 similar stimuli + different responses  confusion = little transfer
 different stimuli + similar response  discrimination = transfer
 similar stimuli + similar response = maximum transfer

4. Importance of Retrieval (information processing model)
= in order to match old info with new situation; both need to be present in WM
 WM has limited capacity, THEREFORE transfer is hard and uncommon
 retrieval cues make it easier to get old information into WM too, THUS enhance transfer

5. Situated learning
= what we learn is tied to the situation, environment, context we learn it in.
 transfer is difficult; doesn’t happen unless extremely similar situation

6. Metacognitive transfer (contemporary)
= if one knows how to learn/has learnt how to learn  transfer to other domains
 Learning improves in other domains once this is mastered.
 general transfer
 learning at 1 time can facilitate learning at other time

7. Emotional reaction, motivation & attitudes.
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