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Identifying Subordinate Skills & Entry Behaviors

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Presentation on theme: "Identifying Subordinate Skills & Entry Behaviors"— Presentation transcript:

1 Identifying Subordinate Skills & Entry Behaviors
Dick & Carey Chapter 4

2 Review: Goals & Goal Analysis
A. Identify an Instructional Goal What do you want the learner to do? B. Analyze the Goal Statement: 1. What type of learning is the goal? Attitudinal, Psychomotor, Intellectual, or Verbal Information Skills 2. Describe exactly what the student will be doing when performing the goal.

3 Step Two: Identify Subordinate Skills

4 For Intellectual or Psychomotor Goals Use

5 Hierarchical Approach
For each step in the goal ask this question: “ What must the student already know so that , with a minimal amount of instruction, this task can be learned?” Yields one or more subordinate skills

6 For lntellectual Skills
The subordinate skills should follow Gagne's hierarchy higher-order rules rules concepts discriminations

7 For Verbal Information Skills
Cluster Analysis Identify the info. needed to achieve the goal

8 For Attitude Goals ask two questions:

9 Question # 1 “What must the learner do when exhibiting this attitude?”
answer is almost always psychomotor or intellectual skill (hierarchical analysis)

10 Question # 2 “Why should the learner exhibit this attitude?”
the answer is usually verbal information analyzed using a separate cluster or integrated into the basic hierarchical analysis that was done in the first half of the analysis

11 Entry Behaviors Instructional analysis serves to identify skills a learner must know before they begin instruction Identify the hierarchy or cluster level that a majority of the population will already have

12 Caveats of Entry Behavior
Tentativeness of the line Danger of drawing the line too low Beta test if practical


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