David Kolb is best known for his work on
experiential learning. Heavily influenced by Dewey, and Piaget, he preferred an
experiential model for learning, as opposed to purely cognitive models. We
obviously learn much from experience, either formally in terms of structured
exposure in training or in work and life itself through informal learning. Kolb
and others since have tried to examine how we learn experientially and how this
can be used to guide instructional strategies.
Four
stage learning cycle
Kolb (with Roger Fry) created his famous
four stage learning cycle.
He claims that we can enter the cycle at
any point and that learning is really a process of looping round and round,
seeing improvement on each loop. We may, for example, be able to do something
but not express it in abstract terms. In the end, however, learning is formed
through real experience, where one’s ideas are put to the test. Feedback then
shapes the learning so that performance improves.
Learning styles
In Experiential Learning
Kolb presents a learning styles theory:
Convergers
like to take abstract ideas and reason then apply them to solve problems
Divergers
use concrete
experience and reflective observation to come up with imaginative solutions
Assimilators
take abstract ideas and reason and combine it with reflective observation
Accommodators
use
concrete experience and active experimentation and like to get on with doing
things
This schema gave
rise to a learning styles assessment that could be used to determine the most
appropriate form of learning for that individual.
Critique
Models such as Kolb’s four stage, experiential, cycle model can be
over-simplistic. They rarely match the reality of the learning process and one
can argue that stages can be skipped or performed in parallel. Subsequent tests
of the model by Jarvis (1987, 1995) have indeed shown that things are more
complex. The model is less of a cycle and more of a causal web. Others have argued
that it pays too little attention to theory, information tasks, memorisation
and reflection. Research into skills acquisition and the use of simulators has
taken us well beyond the Kolb model into far more sophisticated analyses of
learning and practice through experience.
On learning styles,
it is hard to believe that people fall into these categories or that learning
styles do, as many learning styles theorists claim, usually fall neatly into
four categories. One negative influence on learning theory, although Kolb
cannot be held responsible, is that the model had a direct influence on Honey
and Mumford’s learning styles theory leading to a simplistic, four-category
description of types of learning and learners. Neither Kolb nor Honey &
Mumford’s learning styles theory were in any real sense, empirically
researched. In fact recent research as doubted their usefulness and thrown
doubt on their very existence.
Conclusion
Kolb is a refreshing alternative to the overemphasis on academic,
knowledge-based learning and the idea of cyclical learning informed by
experience is sound, as is the importance of formative experiences themselves
in learning. However we must be careful in reducing experiential learning or learning
by doing to such a simple schema. Although this model is a useful guide, in
practice, the design of experiential learning is more complex.
Bibliography
Kolb, D. A. (1984) Experiential Learning,
Englewood Cliffs, NJ.: Prentice Hall.
Kolb, D. A. (1976) The Learning Style
Inventory: Technical Manual, Boston, Ma.: McBer.
Kolb, D. A. (with J. Osland and I. Rubin)
(1995a) Organizational Behavior: An Experiential Approach to Human Behavior
in Organizations 6e, Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice Hall.
Kolb. D. A. and Fry, R. (1975) 'Toward an
applied theory of experiential learning;, in C. Cooper (ed.) Theories of
Group Process, London: John Wiley.
Jarvis, P. (1987) Adult Learning in the Social Context,
London: Croom Helm. 220 pages.
Jarvis P. (1995) Adult and Continuing Education.
Theory and practice 2e, London: Routledge.
1 comment:
Hi Donald;
From the theoretical side, I think developments in pragmatism (especially Vygotsky and the dialogical thinkers) can dig deeper into Kolb's Dewey inspired insights. In Vygotsky's model, cognition and acting are not stages, but are like two sides of a coin, each embedded in the other. Dialogic thinkers bring the cognition of others into the equation. The idea that no one thinks alone.
"the individual mind can exist only in relation to other minds with shared meanings" (Mead 1982: 5) From Wikipedia's George Heabert Mead Article.
The next quotes are a prelude to John Shotter's paper here: http://www.johnshotter.com/mypapers/Consciousness.pdf
“But a certain kind of associated or joint life when brought into being has an unexpected by-product – the formation of those peculiar acquired dispositions, attitudes, which are termed mind” (Dewey, 1917, p.272).
“The feeling of an unbridgeable gulf between consciousness and brain processes: how does it come about that this does not come into the considerations of our ordinary life?” (Wittgenstein, 1953, no.412).
“... consciousness itself can arise and become a viable fact only in the material embodiment of signs” (Voloshinov, 1986, p.11).
“It is more productive to conceive of the mind as a virtuality than as a framework, as a dynamism than as a structure” (Benveniste, 1971, p.63).
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