Beyond Cognitive Load Theory: Why Learning Needs More than Memory Management
University of Beira Interior · The University of Notre Dame Australia · +4 more institutions
Abstract
The role of cognitive load theory (CLT) in understanding effective pedagogy has received increased attention in the fields of education and psychology in recent years. A considerable amount of literature has been published on the CLT construct as foundational guidance for instructional design by focusing on managing cognitive load in working memory to enhance learning outcomes. However, recent neuroscientific findings and practical critiques suggest that CLT's emphasis on content-focused instruction and cognitive efficiency may overlook the complexity of human learning.
This conceptual paper synthesises evidence from cognitive science, developmental psychology, neuroscience, health sciences and educational research to examine the scope conditions and limitations of CLT when applied as a general framework for K-12 learning. One of the major theoretical issues identified is the lack of consideration for the broad set of interpersonal and self-management skills, creating potential limitations for real-world educational contexts, where social-emotional and self-regulatory abilities are as crucial as cognitive competencies.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 145.43
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 112
Authors
6- ASAndrew SortwellCorresponding
University of Beira Interior, The University of Notre Dame Australia
- EGEvgenia Gkintoni
University of Patras, General University Hospital of Patras
- JDJesús Díaz‐García
University of Chieti-Pescara
- PEPeter Ellerton
The University of Queensland
- RFRicardo Ferraz
University of Beira Interior
Topics & keywords
- Cognition
- Cognitive load
- Cognitive systems
- Working memory
- Quality Education