24 April 2013

AMS


Hillary Hines

ENG. 111

3 April 2013

AMS: Lack of Senses

            The key barrier to adult learning is the absence of engaging more than one of a student’s senses at a time during educational experiences. The norm seems to be—in a classroom environment—that students sit in their seats and listen to an instructor’s lecture. Inherently, students have been taught to just listen and remember. However, when a person sets about learning a task individually, does that person just listen to someone explain how the task is accomplished? Or, does that individual attempt such a task repeatedly and learn through trial and error? Take learning to ride a bicycle, for example: the process involves sitting in the seat, pedaling, and holding the handle bars while another person supports the individual on the bike to ensure they do not fall until they are accustomed to the feel and function of the bicycle. Now, imagine if that person had to learn to ride a bicycle by simply lecture alone; would they have ever accomplished this learning task? The answer is ultimately no, they would learn the concept of riding a bicycle, but not its actual function. Learning the function of riding a bicycle is a tangible learning experience.

            Learning by concept alone—or by lecture, is not enough to leave a long-lasting impression. In Paulo Freire’s, “The “Banking” Concept of Education,” Freire describes learning by concept alone as the “banking” concept, which means, “Instead of communicating, the teacher issues communiques and makes deposits which the students patiently receive, memorize, and repeat” (Freire 240). The trouble with this form of education is that once these students are no longer required to repeat this information, it will be discarded and forgotten because such information was so inanimate to them. Freire then continues, “the scope of action allowed to the students extends only as far as receiving, filing, and storing the deposits” (Freire 240). During a lecture, this is ultimately the only option many students—if not all—have to categorize information they are “absorbing.” Susan E. Cooperstein, User Education Librarian at Notre Dame, and Elizabeth Kocevar-Weidinger, Instruction Librarian at Longwood University, support and extend upon Freire’s claims in their article, “Beyond Active Learning: a Constructivist Approach to Learning,” through this statement, “Students are not passive receptacles. They do not easily process or transfer what they passively receive” (Cooperstein & Kocevar-Weidinger 142). Taking the bicycle example into consideration, the individual would learn to ride the bicycle by going beyond lectured on the how-to and instead pursuing the actual action and experience of riding the bicycle. Freire proceeds to make a called point against learning by concept, “Implicit in the banking concept is the assumption of a dichotomy between human beings and the world: a person is merely in the world, not with the world or with others; the individual is spectator, not re-creator” (Freire 243). In order to truly learn, students cannot act as simple spectators of the lesson or subject. Students must be given the option to re-create what they have learned through tangible experiences to enforce a deeper, long-lasting understanding. Hence, utilizing the senses which have been numbed in a classroom setting for too long.

            After a person learns to ride a bicycle, do they forget? Of course not, because they learned this task through the utilization of all their senses, not just one. Susan E. Cooperstein and Elizabeth Kocevar-Weidinger suggest, “Abstract concepts become meaningful, transferable, and retained because they are attached to performance of an activity. The activities lead to concepts; the students construct the meaning” (Cooperstein & Elizabeth Kocevar-Weidinger 145). When a student engages in the actions of learning a task, instead of merely listening to the concept of the activity, the student is able to discover a deeper and long-lasting understanding of the activity. The student is then able to engage in the conceptual aspect of the activity—also known as the lecture, with new found understanding. The activity should come before the concept, in order to promote effective learning. According to Daniel J. Glisczinski, in his article “Lighting Up The Mind: Transforming Learning Through The Applied Scholarship Neuroscience,” “the body and the brain are part of the same continuous organism, and what happens to the body happens to the brain…” (Glisczinski 8). Here, it is apparent that learning through activity—while engaging all of the senses, causes the body and brain to permanently remember the task, forever changing and enhancing the ability of memory retention. Students are used to lectures coming before engaging in any sort of activity. Looking back at the bicycle example: by engaging all of an individual’s senses toward the learning task of riding a bicycle, they are able to understand the concept of riding a bicycle with perfect clarity. This process could then be explained to others; however, other individuals would still have to engage in the activity of riding a bicycle in order to fully comprehend the concept for themselves. This is why teaching by lecture alone does not work and cannot promote long-lasting memory retention.

            Only from learning through tangible experience can students be able to develop memory retention from short-term to long-term. Once an individual has performed an action, they area able to understand its significance and will not be liable to forget the process of said action. According to Cooperstein and Kocevar-Weidinger, “through activity students discover their own truths” (Cooperstein & Kocevar-Weidinger 142). When giving a student an activity, they develop questions and their own answers through the process of utilizing their senses; this process supports and nurtures critical thinking skills. Glisczinski extends upon active learning and its benefits, “Enduring learning, characterized by deep understanding, emanates from experience that engages multiple senses and learning modalities” (Glisczinski 3). Which means, to truly understand what it is students are learning, they have to physically experience the subject in order for it to have any affect. Lectures are constructed so one person generally speaks and an audience listens, numbing the other senses to the potential of long-term memory. Continuing with Glisczinski, “While hearing is one route to knowing, it’s power for long-term recall or behavior change is limited if not partnered with metacognition and deliberate action” (Glisczinski 7). Re-capping the bicycle example, an individual could explain the concept of riding a bike to another; however, the process cannot be truly learned unless the auditory experience is coupled with the more tangible experience. As Freire mentioned, through simple auditory experience the individual may feel “in the world” as spectators and instead be “with the world” as recreators. Lectures ultimately make students feel  detached from the lesson being portrayed and they inevitably learn nothing of use to them. Only through tangible learning experiences will students immerse themselves in the lesson and develop useful knowledge through the enlightment of sensory interactions and stimulation.

            If more than one sense cannot be stimulated during educational experiences, adult learning will not be successful; this is our barrier. Learning by concept alone produces students with a sense of detachment from the lesson being portrayed to them. Through the student may retain the concepts of the lesson, the concepts will soon be discarded when they are no longer needed because the student is not able to relate such concepts to tangible experiences. Engaging all of a student’s senses through hands-on experiences—such as riding a bicycle, students are able to retain the experience and describe the concepts because, as Glisczinski stated, “What happens to the body happens to the brain” (Glisczinski 8) creating long-lasting—if not permanent, memory retention and recall. In the famous words of Confucius, “I hear and I forget. I see and I remember. I do and I understand” (Glisczinski 3).  Paulo Freire, Daniel J. Glisczinski, and Susan E. Cooperstein and Elizabeth Kocevar-Weidinger, all share similar views that educational experiences are deemed unsuccessful when not coupled with materials to stimulate multiple senses. The standard lecture is not enough to capture student’s profound interest or leave a more permanent, long-lasting impression on memory retention. To relate to Confucius: hearing education will soon be forgotten, seeing education will be remembered; but for how long? Doing education promotes understanding and the utilization of the senses—leaving long-lasting impressions. By promoting active learning and going beyond the norm of the simple lecture, students could permanently understand both the concept and the function of what they are learning; making learning experiences more applicable and useful to everyday life.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

           

 


 

 

Works Cited


 

Freire, P. (2007). The "Banking" Concept of Education. In R. Norgaard, Composing Knowledge: Readings for College Writers (pp. 239-251). Boston: Bedford/St. Martin's.

Glisczinski, D. J. (2011). Lighting Up the Mind: Transforming Learning Through the Applied Scholarship of Cognitive Neuroscience. International Journal for the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning, 1-11.

Kocevar-Weidinger, E., & Cooperstein, S. E. (2004). Beyond Active Learning: A Constructivist Approach to Learning. Emerald Volume 32, 141-148.

 

 

 

No comments:

Post a Comment