Poster Project: 'Explaining Educational Learning Theories through Defining Clauses'
1. Objective: Students will apply relative clauses while writing a short explanation of a learning theory based on research.
2. Instructions:
Students research and explain one learning theory in a short, coherent paragraph (100–130 words) using defining relative clauses (who, which, that, where, whose). They then design a poster for classroom display combining theory and pedagogy.
3. Poster Design Components:
Each
student/group designs a poster including:
- Title: Name of the theory (e.g., Constructivism
in English Learning)
- Theorist(s): e.g., Vygotsky, Piaget,
Skinner, Rogers
- Short explanation paragraph: using defining
relative clauses
- Icons/Visuals: representing collaboration,
feedback, scaffolding, etc.
- Classroom Activity Example: one clear example from the paragraph
- APA Reference: e.g., Vygotsky, L. S. (1978). Mind
in Society. Harvard University Press.
4. Assessment Rubric (10 points)
|
Criterion |
Description |
Points |
|
Grammar
accuracy |
Correct and
varied use of defining relative clauses |
2 |
|
Content
accuracy |
Faithful,
concise explanation of the theory |
2 |
|
Connection
& cohesion |
Logical
linking between ideas and example |
2 |
|
Visual
presentation |
Clear layout,
color, images, readability |
2 |
|
Creativity
& clarity |
Original,
pedagogically meaningful design |
2 |
|
Total |
10 points |
🧠
Foundational Educational Learning Theories:
- Constructivism – learners actively construct
knowledge through experience and interaction (Vygotsky, Piaget).
- Behaviorism – learning as habit formation
through repetition and reinforcement (Skinner, Pavlov, Thorndike).
- Cognitivism – language learning as a mental
process involving input, storage, and retrieval (Piaget, Bruner).
- Sociocultural Theory – emphasizes social
interaction, scaffolding, and the Zone of Proximal Development (Vygotsky).
- Krashen’s Input Hypothesis – comprehensible
input (“i + 1”) is essential for acquisition.
- Swain’s Output Hypothesis – learners improve
through meaningful language production.
- Interaction Hypothesis – negotiation of
meaning during communication promotes acquisition (Long).
- Connectionism – language learning as pattern
recognition through exposure and frequency (Rumelhart & McClelland).
- Humanistic Approaches – focus on affective
factors, motivation, and the whole learner (Rogers, Maslow).


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