Jerome
Bruner, a key player in the US Head Start initiative, has long been in favour
of educational reform. The Process of
Education (1960) laid out his general views on the subject, Bruner came to see that culture played an important part in learning, in The Culture of
Education (1997), which makes an appeal for a broad based culture of learning
beyond the narrow confines of traditional schooling.
Constructivist
His introduction to Vygotsky’s Thought and Language was written in in
1962 and, influenced by Vygotsky, he emphasises the role of the teacher, language
and instruction. He thought that different processes were used by learners in
problem solving and that these vary from person to person and that social
interaction lay at the root of good learning. The background to his theories on
instruction is based on a social constructivist view of development based on
the gradual exposure to socially mediated narratives and explanations.
Jerome Bruner is a social constructivist,
in the sense that he sees learning as a dynamic process where learners
construct or build knowledge, based on their existing knowledge. This is an
active process of selection, construction and decision-making that builds on
existing mental models. It is this that brings meaning to the new knowledge
allowing the learner to move beyond their existing structures.
Bruner
builds on the Socratic tradition of learning through dialogue, encouraging the
learner to come to enlighten themselves through reflection. Careful curriculum
design is essential so that one area builds upon the other.
Four principles
His theory
of instruction addresses four principles:
1.
Readiness. The
learner must have a predisposition to learn and so their experiences and
context must be considered.
2.
Structure. The
content must be structured so that it can be grasped by the learner.
3.
Sequence. Material
must be presented in the most effective sequences.
4.
Generation. Good
learning should encourage extrapolation, manipulation and a filling in the
gaps, just beyond the learners existing knowledge.
Scaffolding
Bruner also
gave us this word in educational theory and the recognition that learners need
to be either self-aware or helped to build on existing knowledge is certainly a
useful device, albeit a little hazy. The problem with these constructivist
generalisations is that they immediately beg more detailed questions about what
we mean by ‘structure’, ‘sequence’ and ‘scaffolding’.
Conclusion
Bruner, like Vygotsky, focuses on the social and
cultural aspects of learning but can also be seen as a cognitive psychologist. He suggests that people learn with meaning and
personal significance in mind, not just through attention to the facts.
Knowledge and memory are therefore constructed. Learning must therefore be a
process of discovery where learners build their own knowledge, with the active
dialogue of teachers, building on their existing knowledge. However, social
constructivism is sometimes in danger of producing a vocabulary that is used
without much reference to actual practice and detail.
It has
proven more fruitful to focus on how different types of memory work in terms of
their limitations, elaboration, storage, reinforcement and recall. The endless,
general theorizing in ‘social’ context rarely identifies practical issues that
determine actual remembered recall of knowledge and skills. His three ‘modes of
representation’ action, image and language are reasonable matches to action,
episodic and semantic memory. Where it is useful is in developmental psychology
where one can progress from action to image to language. His ‘spiral curriculum’
where one repeatedly revisits knowledge and skills, but at a higher level each
time, has much to recommend, as it is compatible with other areas in the
psychology of learning.
Bibliography
Bruner, J.
(1960). The Process of Education. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University
Press.
Bruner, J.
(1966). Toward a Theory of Instruction. Cambridge, MA: Harvard
University Press.
Bruner, J.
(1973). Going Beyond the Information Given. New York: Norton.
Bruner, J.
(1986). Actual Minds, Possible Worlds. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University
Press.
Bruner, J.
(1990). Acts of Meaning. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
Bruner, J.
(1996). The Culture of Education,
Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
4 comments:
¿Para cuando Ausubel, Gagne y Reigeluth?
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It was refreshing to hear someone reflect on scaffolding as a 'hazy' concept. I spent most of my uni days struggling to really grasp what exactly I should be doing, all the while being told how imperitive it was to my teaching and how straightforward it was to do.
Later in my teaching days I was given a very clear step-by-step method of 'scaffolding'. However it didn't seem to fit with the idea of constructivist learning because it required specific instruction and demonstration, there was no space for exploration.
In writing these pieces it has become clear to me how hazy a lot of common educational concepts are and how irrelevant most are in actual teaching. My sympathies are with you on this one!
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