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photo credits: Wikimedia Commons
Learning is the process of acquiring new understanding, knowledge, behaviors, skills, values, attitudes, and preferences. The ability to learn is possessed by humans, non-human animals, and some machines; there is also evidence for some kind of learning in certain plants. Some learning is immediate, induced by a single event (e.g. being burned by a hot stove), but much skill and knowledge accumulate from repeated experiences. The changes induced by learning often last a lifetime, and it is hard to distinguish learned material that seems to be "lost" from that which cannot be retrieved. Human learning starts at birth (it might even start before) and continues until death as a consequence of ongoing interactions between people and their environment. The nature and processes involved in learning are studied in many established fields (including educational psychology, neuropsychology, experimental psychology, cognitive sciences, and pedagogy), as well as emerging fields of knowledge (e.g. with a shared interest in the topic of learning from safety events such as incidents/accidents, or in collaborative learning health systems). Research in such fields has led to the identification of various sorts of learning. For example, learning may occur as a result of habituation, or classical conditioning, operant conditioning or as a result of more complex activities such as play, seen only in relatively intelligent animals. Learning may occur consciously or without conscious awareness. Learning that an aversive event cannot be avoided or escaped may result in a condition called learned helplessness. There is evidence for human behavioral learning prenatally, in which habituation has been observed as early as 32 weeks into gestation, indicating that the central nervous system is sufficiently developed and primed for learning and memory to occur very early on in development. Play has been approached by several theorists as a form of learning. Children experiment with the world, learn the rules, and learn to interact through play. Lev Vygotsky agrees that play is pivotal for children's development, since they make meaning of their environment through playing educational games. For Vygotsky, however, play is the first form of learning language and communication, and the stage where a child begins to understand rules and symbols. This has led to a view that learning in organisms is always related to semiosis, and is often associated with representational systems/activity. Source: Wikipedia (en)
Works about learning 28
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Learning to Go Alone
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The psychology of human learning
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Use Your Head
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Denken, Lernen, Vergessen / Frederic Vester
Passagen und Passantinnen: Biographisches Lernen junger Frauen – eine Längsschnittstudie
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Escape from Corporate America: A Practical Guide to Creating the Career of Your Dreams
Hyperaktiv!
La guitare
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Fundamentals of human learning
Lehrerdämmerung
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La diferenciación mediante la estrategia aula invertida: La diferenciación mediante la estrategia aula invertida, para lograr la autorregulación del aprendizaje
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Flipped classroom
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Digitalization and Learning as a Worlding Practice
The Organization of Behavior
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Learn to read and write: app for the literacy learning
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Cursiv
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Powerful Teaching
Lifelong Kindergarten
Vermittlung als Gott
Yoga pour les enfants avec Nomasté le singe
Rocket écrit une histoire
Caillou devine
Lernen
Lernverhältnisse
Die Unruhe des Lernens
Libre pour apprendre
Apprendre Avec Les Animaux: l'Alphabet
Première enfance : de la naissance à la maturité scolaire
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