Peter Doolittle: How your "working memory" makes sense of the world
Peter Doolittle: 你嘅工作記憶點樣理解世界
Peter Doolittle is striving to understand the processes of human learning. Full bio
Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.
into our long-term memory
on standardized tests,
is play a little bit with some of that.
工作記憶容量嘅遊戲
working memory out for a ride.
I'm going to ask you to answer three questions.
just in case you were wondering.
to the way we function, right?
對大腦嘅運作好重要,係嗎?
to so many different ideas.
喺每一秒裏面搵到意思
working memory is awesome.
一路了解自己當時嘅感受
for allowing us to communicate.
unless we apply it to something,
to this one over here,
is how we negotiate that.
about a couple of strategies here,
information target-rich environment
我哋嘅生存、我哋嘅生活
do I agree with him?
and when you get home,
became a very negative thing.
new knowledge to prior knowledge.
將新知識連到去已有嘅知識
and it becomes more meaningful.
We are built for images.
everything that happens to us.
approximation of sophistication.
We have to support that.
an organizational chart on it
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Peter Doolittle - Educational psychology professorPeter Doolittle is striving to understand the processes of human learning.
Why you should listen
Peter Doolittle is a professor of educational psychology in the School of Education at Virginia Tech, where he is also the executive director of the Center for Instructional Development and Educational Research. He teaches classes such as Cognition and Instruction, Constructivism and Education, Multimedia Cognition and College Teaching, but his research mainly focuses on learning in multimedia environments and the role of "working memory."
Doolittle has taught educational psychology around the world. He is the executive editor of the International Journal of Teaching and Learning in Higher Education and the co-executive editor of the International Journal of ePortfolio.
Peter Doolittle | Speaker | TED.com