Last changed
13 Sept 2013 ............... Length about 500 words (5,000 bytes).
(Document started on 13 Sept 2013.)
This is a WWW document maintained by
Steve Draper, installed at http://www.psy.gla.ac.uk/~steve/rap/na.html.
You may copy it.
How to refer to it.
Web site logical path:
[www.psy.gla.ac.uk]
[~steve]
[rap]
[principles]
[this page]
Merrill's (14) first principles of instruction
By
Steve Draper,
Department of Psychology,
University of Glasgow.
These principles come from:
Task-centered principle
- Learning is promoted when instruction is in the context of
whole real-world tasks.
- Learning is promoted when learners are engaged in a task-centered instructional strategy involving a progression
of whole real-world tasks.
Activation principle
- Learning is promoted when learners activate
relevant cognitive structures by being directed to recall, describe or
demonstrate relevant prior knowledge or experience.
- Activation is enhanced when learners share
previous experience with one another.
- Activation is enhanced when learners recall or acquire a
structure for organizing the new knowledge, when this
structure is the basis for guidance during demonstration, is the basis for
coaching during application, and is a basis for reflection during integration.
Demonstration principle
- Learning is promoted when learners observe a
demonstration of the skills to be learned that is
consistent with the type of content being taught.
- Demonstrations are enhanced when learners are
guided to relate general information or an organizing
structure to specific instances.
- Demonstrations are enhanced by peer-discussion
and peer-demonstration.
Application principle
- Learning is promoted when learners engage in
application of their newly acquired knowledge or skill
that is consistent with the type of content being taught.
- Application is effective only when learners receive intrinsic or
corrective feedback.
- Application is enhanced when learners are coached and when this
coaching is gradually withdrawn for each
subsequent task.
- Application is enhanced by peer-collaboration and
peer critique.
Integration principle
- Learning is promoted when learners integrate
their new knowledge into their everyday life by being directed to reflect-on,
discuss, or defend their new knowledge or skill.
- Integration is enhanced by peer-discussion and
peer-critique.
- Integration is enhanced when learners create, invent, or explore
personal ways to use their new knowledge or skill.
- Integration is enhanced when learners
publicly demonstrate their new knowledge or skill.
Web site logical path:
[www.psy.gla.ac.uk]
[~steve]
[rap]
[principles]
[this page]
[Top of this page]