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Cognitivism |
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Cognitivism was officially recognized around 1956. It defined learning as an internal, active, creative process. It emphasizes the critical role that memory plays in helping us translate new information into a form that is meaningful and will allow us to retrieve it and be able to use it. Memory involves three processes: attention, encoding and retrieval. Wilhelm Wundt is considered the father of cognitive psychology.
The Information Processing Model helps us to understand how our mind takes in, processes, stores and retrieves information. Resources for Cognitivism:
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Last modified Thursday, May 10, 2001 4:51 PM
Contact Dana at dbayer @sfsu.edu.