Learning Theories Related To Health Care Practice
Learning Theories Related To Health Care Practice
Learning Theories Related To Health Care Practice
Learning is defined in this chapter as a relatively permanent change in thinking, emotional functioning,
skill, and/or behavior as a result of experience. It is the process by which individuals gain new knowledge
or skills and change their thoughts, feelings, attitudes and actions.
Learning Theory is a logical framework describing, explaining, or predicting how people learn. Whether
used singly or in combination, learning theories have much to offer to the practice of health care.
(Braungart et al.,
To encourage people to learn new information or to change their attitudes and responses, behaviorists
recommend altering conditions in the environment and reinforcing positive behavior after they occur.
Two ways to change behavior and encourage learning using the behaviorist principles of respondent
conditioning and operant conditioning:
Respondent conditioning – first identified and demonstrated by Russian psychologist, Ivan
Pavlov, respondent conditioning (also termed classical or Pavlovian conditioning)
emphasizes the importance of stimulus conditions in the environment and the associations
formed in the learning process (Ormrod, 2016).
Operant Conditioning – Developed primarily by B. F. Skinner (1974, 1989), focuses on the
behavior of the organism and the reinforcement that occurs after the response.
The basic principles of behaviorist principle are:
Focus on the learner’s drives, the external factors in the environment that influence a
learners associations, and on reinforcements that increase or decrease responses.
The teacher’s task is first to assess conditions in the environment that lead to specific
responses, the learner’s past habits and history of S – R connections, and what is
reinforcing the learner. Then teachers must manipulate conditions to build new
associations, provide appropriate reinforcement, and allow for practice to strengthen
connections between stimuli in the environment and a person’s responses or behavior.
2. Cognitive Learning Theory
Cognitive learning theory focuses on what goes on inside the mind of the learner. According to this
perspective, for individuals to learn, they must change their perceptions and thoughts and form new
understandings and insights. Unlike the behaviorists, cognitive psychologists maintain that rewarding
people for their behavior is not necessary for learning. More important are learner’s goals and
expectations, which creates tensions that motivate them to act.
Principles of Teaching
1. Credibility
It is the degree to which the message to be communicated is perceived as trustworthy by the receiver.
Good health education must be consistent and compatible with scientific knowledge and also with the
local culture, educational system and social goals.
2. Interest
Health teaching should be related to the interests of the people
Health programme should be based on the “FELT NEEDS”, so that it becomes “people’s programme
Felt needs are the real health needs of the people, that is needs the people feel about themselves.
3. Participation
A high degree of participation tends to create a sense of involvement, personal acceptance and
decision –making. It provides maximum feedback.
4. Motivation
In every person, there is a fundamental desire to learn. Awakening this desire is called motivation.
5. Comprehension
Health educator must know the level of understanding, education and literacy of people to whom the
teaching is directed. Always communicate in the language people understand. Teaching should be
within the mental capacity of the audience.
6. Reinforcement
Repetition of message at intervals is necessary. If the message is repeated in different ways, people
are more likely to remember it.
7. Learning by doing
The importance of learning by doing can be best illustrated by the Chinese proverb “if I hear, I forget;
if I see, I remember; if I do, I know”.
8. Known to unknown
We must proceed,
“from the concrete to the abstract”
“from the particular to the general”
“from the simple to the more complicated”
“from the easy to more difficult”
“from the known to unknown”
Here health communicator uses the existing knowledge of the people as pegs on which to hang new
knowledge.
9. Setting an example
The health educator should set a good example in the things he is teaching.
11. Feedback
The health educator can modify the elements of the system (e.g., message, channels) in the light of
feedback from his audience. For effective communication, feedback is of paramount importance.
12. Leaders
Leaders are agents of change and they can be made use of in health education work.
Principles of learning, also known as laws of learning, are readiness, exercise, effect, primacy,
recency, intensity and freedom.
1. Readiness
Readiness implies a degree of willingness and eagerness of an individual to learn something
new. Individuals learn best when they are physically, mentally and emotionally ready to learn
— and they do not learn well if they see no reason for learning.
2. Exercise
The principle of exercise states that those things that are most often repeated are the ones that
are best remembered.
Your audience will learn best and retain information longer when they have meaningful
practice and repetition. It is clear that practice leads to improvement only when it is followed
by positive feedback.
3. Effect
The principle of effect is that learning is strengthened when accompanied by a pleasant or
satisfying feeling — and that learning is weakened when associated with an unpleasant
feeling. The learner will strive to continue learning as long as it provides a pleasant effect.
Positive reinforcement is more likely to lead to success and motivate the learner — so as a
health educator you should recognize this feature and tell your audience how well they are
doing.
4. Primacy
Primacy, the state of being first, often creates a strong impression which may be very
difficult to change.
Things learned first create a strong impression in the mind that is difficult to erase.
‘Unteaching’ or erasing from the mind incorrect first impressions is harder than teaching
them correctly in the first place. The learner’s first experience should be positive, functional
and lay the foundation for all that is to follow.
5. Recency
The principle of recency states that things most recently learned are best remembered.
Information acquired most recently generally is remembered best; frequent review and
summarising will help fixing in the audience’s mind topics that have been covered. To that
end, the health educator should repeat, restate or re-emphasise important points at the end of
a lesson to help the audience remember them.
6. Intensity
The more intense the material taught, the more likely it will be retained.
A sharp, clear, dramatic, or exciting learning experience teaches more than a routine or
boring experience. The principle of intensity implies that a learner will learn more from the
real thing than from a substitute.
7. Freedom
The principle of freedom states that things freely learned are best learned. Conversely, if the
audience is forced to learn something, the more difficult it is for them to learn.
Compulsion and forcing are not favorable for personal growth. For example, if you force a
family to construct a latrine in their compound, they may not be interested to do that.
However if you motivate them to do that through proper education of the family, they are
more likely to construct the latrines and use them properly.
References