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KURT LEWIN
(German psychologist)
FIELD
 A Field is a psychological concept.
 Every individual has his own field of
perception and field forces.
 Field consist of a person and his psychological
environment.
Psychological environment implies the
mental world in which a person lives at a defined
moment of his life.
IMPORTANT CONCEPTS IN FIELD THEORY
 Life space
 Foreign Hull
 Topology
 Vector
 Valence
 Conflict
 Locomotion
 Barriers
LIFE SPACE
 Life space is a psychological representation of individual's
environment.
 The life space includes the person himself and everything in
his environment that influence his behavior.
 It includes both the things of which he is consciously aware
and the factors which influence him even though he is
unconscious of them .
 An object which exists, but of which the person is not aware
and which does not influence him would not be a factor of his
life space.
 Similarly if an object does not exist but of which the person
thinks to be there and reacts to it becomes a part of his life
space .
Eg: If a child thinks that there is a snake on the floor even if
it is imaginary, it is the part of his life space.
 It includes the persons , his drives, motives, believes, tensions,
thoughts, feelings and his physical environment which consist
of perceived objects and events.
 The life spaces of two persons in an identical situation may
be entirely different .
A PERSON IN LIFE SPACE.
The person is often represented as a points moving about in his life.
Psychologically a person is composed of two components
 motor perceptual stratum(abilities)
 Inner personal stratum(needs)
TOPOLOGY
Topology is non-metrical geometry which includes concepts such as
inside, outside and boundary.
FOREIGN HULL
The life space is surrounded by a non psychological boundary
called foreign hull.
VECTORS
 Vectors are borrowed from mathematical system used in
mechanics to describe the resolution of forces.
 A vector is usually represented by an arrow, it has
 Magnitude
 Direction
 Point of application
 In field psychology, a vector means a force that is influencing
psychological movement towards or away from a goal.
VALENCES
 Valences are the attracting or repelling powers of regions.
 Objects may have either positive or negative valence. The
movement of person is decided by the valence of the goal.
POSITIVE VALENCE: The object or goal which satisfy
needs or are attractive to the person.
NEGATIVE VALENCE: The object or goal which
threatens the individual or are repulsive to the person.
 A person tends to move toward a region in life space that has
positive valence and he tends to move away from a region in
life space that has negative valence.
CONFLICTS
 It is the state of tensions brought in by the presence of two
opposing desires in the individual .
 If only one vector impelling upon the individual, he will move in
the direction indicated by the vector .
 If two equally balanced vectors are operating , the result is a
conflict.
 As the person is influenced by several valences at a time, these give
rise to conflicts.
There are three types of conflicts
Approach- approach conflict
Approach – avoidance conflict
Avoidance- avoidance conflict
(i) Approach- Approach conflict
It arises when the person is caught in between two goals both having
positive valences.
It is a conflict between two positive goals which are equally attractive.
Eg: 1. A Person who wants to go two marriages scheduled at
the same time.
2. A person who wants to choose a course after completing
degree.
(ii) Approach-Avoidance conflict
It arises when the person is caught in between a positive and a negative
goal.
The same object has strong positive valence as well as negative valence.
Eg: Smoking, alcohol consumption etc is enjoyable, but they are
threat to health.
(iii) Avoidance-Avoidance conflict
It arises when a person is caught in between two goals both
having negative valences. The person is like “caught in
between devil and sea”.
Eg: A student who desires to avoid doing homework as well as
the punishment from the teacher.
BARRIERS
 A barrier is a psychological obstruction.
 They restrict the person’s movement towards the goal, and the
path he must follow to reach his goal.
 It may be objects, people, social codes anything which threatens
the motivated individual as he is moving towards a goal.
LOCOMOTION
 Locomotion in life space is delineated by a geometrical
representation of the selection of alternative, the examining of
possibilities , the setting out towards the goal.
“Learning takes place as a result of locomotion from one region
of life space to another. When a person moves from one region to
another, the structure of life space undergoes change”.
According to the field theory proposed by Kurt Lewin,
“Learning is a process of perceptual organization or
reorganization of one’s life space involving insight and
emphasizes on behavior and motivation in learning”.
According to this theory, the behavior(B) of an individual
is a function of interacting person(P) in the total
psychological environmental situation(E)
i.e. B = f(P,E)
EDUCATIONAL IMPLICATION
 The teacher should present the whole problem and evoke the
cognitive and emotional readiness in the learners for optimum
learning.
 In order to achieve optimum communication and meaningful give
and take, a teacher should try to workout the life space of each
student in his class.
 Motivation is an important factor in bringing changes in the
cognitive structure of a student In order to motivate the students,
the teacher has to identify both the driving as well as the
restraining forces present in the life space of each student.
 Teacher should organize his instructional strategies in a manner
which will be at the level of ‘exploratory’ rather than
‘explanatory understanding.’
 A change in structure of knowledge may occur with repetition.
Too much repetition does not aid learning so teacher should take
steps to avoid repetition.
 Teacher should use reward and punishment according to the
needs of the situation as Lewin accepted the value of reward and
punishment in learning.
Kurt Lewin's Field theory of learning

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Kurt Lewin's Field theory of learning

  • 1.
  • 3. FIELD  A Field is a psychological concept.  Every individual has his own field of perception and field forces.  Field consist of a person and his psychological environment. Psychological environment implies the mental world in which a person lives at a defined moment of his life.
  • 4. IMPORTANT CONCEPTS IN FIELD THEORY  Life space  Foreign Hull  Topology  Vector  Valence  Conflict  Locomotion  Barriers
  • 5. LIFE SPACE  Life space is a psychological representation of individual's environment.  The life space includes the person himself and everything in his environment that influence his behavior.  It includes both the things of which he is consciously aware and the factors which influence him even though he is unconscious of them .  An object which exists, but of which the person is not aware and which does not influence him would not be a factor of his life space.
  • 6.  Similarly if an object does not exist but of which the person thinks to be there and reacts to it becomes a part of his life space . Eg: If a child thinks that there is a snake on the floor even if it is imaginary, it is the part of his life space.  It includes the persons , his drives, motives, believes, tensions, thoughts, feelings and his physical environment which consist of perceived objects and events.  The life spaces of two persons in an identical situation may be entirely different .
  • 7. A PERSON IN LIFE SPACE. The person is often represented as a points moving about in his life. Psychologically a person is composed of two components  motor perceptual stratum(abilities)  Inner personal stratum(needs)
  • 8. TOPOLOGY Topology is non-metrical geometry which includes concepts such as inside, outside and boundary. FOREIGN HULL The life space is surrounded by a non psychological boundary called foreign hull.
  • 9. VECTORS  Vectors are borrowed from mathematical system used in mechanics to describe the resolution of forces.  A vector is usually represented by an arrow, it has  Magnitude  Direction  Point of application  In field psychology, a vector means a force that is influencing psychological movement towards or away from a goal.
  • 10. VALENCES  Valences are the attracting or repelling powers of regions.  Objects may have either positive or negative valence. The movement of person is decided by the valence of the goal. POSITIVE VALENCE: The object or goal which satisfy needs or are attractive to the person. NEGATIVE VALENCE: The object or goal which threatens the individual or are repulsive to the person.  A person tends to move toward a region in life space that has positive valence and he tends to move away from a region in life space that has negative valence.
  • 11. CONFLICTS  It is the state of tensions brought in by the presence of two opposing desires in the individual .  If only one vector impelling upon the individual, he will move in the direction indicated by the vector .  If two equally balanced vectors are operating , the result is a conflict.  As the person is influenced by several valences at a time, these give rise to conflicts. There are three types of conflicts Approach- approach conflict Approach – avoidance conflict Avoidance- avoidance conflict
  • 12. (i) Approach- Approach conflict It arises when the person is caught in between two goals both having positive valences. It is a conflict between two positive goals which are equally attractive. Eg: 1. A Person who wants to go two marriages scheduled at the same time. 2. A person who wants to choose a course after completing degree.
  • 13. (ii) Approach-Avoidance conflict It arises when the person is caught in between a positive and a negative goal. The same object has strong positive valence as well as negative valence. Eg: Smoking, alcohol consumption etc is enjoyable, but they are threat to health.
  • 14. (iii) Avoidance-Avoidance conflict It arises when a person is caught in between two goals both having negative valences. The person is like “caught in between devil and sea”. Eg: A student who desires to avoid doing homework as well as the punishment from the teacher.
  • 15. BARRIERS  A barrier is a psychological obstruction.  They restrict the person’s movement towards the goal, and the path he must follow to reach his goal.  It may be objects, people, social codes anything which threatens the motivated individual as he is moving towards a goal.
  • 16. LOCOMOTION  Locomotion in life space is delineated by a geometrical representation of the selection of alternative, the examining of possibilities , the setting out towards the goal. “Learning takes place as a result of locomotion from one region of life space to another. When a person moves from one region to another, the structure of life space undergoes change”.
  • 17. According to the field theory proposed by Kurt Lewin, “Learning is a process of perceptual organization or reorganization of one’s life space involving insight and emphasizes on behavior and motivation in learning”. According to this theory, the behavior(B) of an individual is a function of interacting person(P) in the total psychological environmental situation(E) i.e. B = f(P,E)
  • 18. EDUCATIONAL IMPLICATION  The teacher should present the whole problem and evoke the cognitive and emotional readiness in the learners for optimum learning.  In order to achieve optimum communication and meaningful give and take, a teacher should try to workout the life space of each student in his class.  Motivation is an important factor in bringing changes in the cognitive structure of a student In order to motivate the students, the teacher has to identify both the driving as well as the restraining forces present in the life space of each student.
  • 19.  Teacher should organize his instructional strategies in a manner which will be at the level of ‘exploratory’ rather than ‘explanatory understanding.’  A change in structure of knowledge may occur with repetition. Too much repetition does not aid learning so teacher should take steps to avoid repetition.  Teacher should use reward and punishment according to the needs of the situation as Lewin accepted the value of reward and punishment in learning.