The Role of Experience in Learning: Giving Meaning and Authenticity To The Learning Process in Schools
The Role of Experience in Learning: Giving Meaning and Authenticity To The Learning Process in Schools
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about what constitutes learning among people outside of the formal education
field than in it.
To reach their conclusions about how people learn, these scholars make
reference to quantitative and qualitative studies with human subjects. They
follow the canons of science to clarify and verify what they believe to be true. A
contrasting method for exploring the learning phenomenon is to trust in ones
own experience. Beginning with Bouds broader perspective of how people
learn, the following analysis attempts to do this from first principles. It
represents an attempt to trust experience in apposition to, or in contrast with, the
rules of scientific inquiry. The remainder of the paper draws on two more
pragmatic forms of inquiry for its analysis. Following a review of some recent
literature on what constitutes learning, conceptual analysis and comparative
analysis will be used to explicate the essence of experiential learning.
Learning As An Active Versus Passive Process
Traditional pedagogy tends to assume the acquisition of knowledge and
understanding by the mind is a passive exercise. Psychological research and
theory perpetuates this tradition by dividing the person into body and mind, into
active and passive processes. Insufficient attention is paid to combinations of
these categories. The result is a gap between what experience tells us about how
we learn and what the experts tell us. Thought and action tend to have been
separated, thinking and understanding to have been seen as abstract and general,
therefore as teachable in abstract isolation from practical experience. In contrast,
practical competence has often been spoken of as though it were just a matter of
doing; skill is then taken to mean a combination of thoughtless behaviour habits,
inculcatable through simple practice (Tomlinson & Kilner, 1992). The
momentum associated with this view is so deeply imbedded in teacher education
methods and curriculum that it has seldom been challenged, until recently that
is.
Harre and Gillett (1994) in a book entitled The Discursive Mind challenged
the prevailing view of how people retain what they learn. In a chapter entitled,
The Discursive Origins of the Sense of Self, the authors suggested that
learning a language, i.e., learning signs and symbols, does not give human
beings a sense of physical location. It is the learning of perceptual and motor
skills that is responsible for that (p. 111). Human beings, they suggest, live in
two worlds:
One world is essentially discursive in character, that is, it is a world of signs
and symbols subject to normative constraints. [The second is the material or
physical world]. There are two main kinds of skills that are often brought
into play together and in complementary ways [within these two worlds].
There are manual skills, those we use to manipulate material stuff, and there
are discursive skills, those we use in our symbolic interactions. The world of
symbols is organized by the norms and conventions of correct symbol use.
The other world in which we live, the physical or material world, is
structured by causal processes. Our language is our main means for
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managing in the world of symbols, our hands and brains are in the material
world. (pp. 99-100)
This analysis may help explain the experiential frame of reference preferred
by technological education teachers. These teachers have lived and worked
extensively in the material world developing their problem solving and manual
skills. They often become socialized into a way of learning that is different from
that used in the schools. In some respects learning and practicing technology are
synonymous activities to them. Human development in its fullest sense (a
balance of the two worlds Harre and Gillett describe) requires that people learn
to function effectively in the discursive world but as a complement to the
material world, rather than in opposition to it or apart from it. These technology
teachers may, in fact, be applying a learning methodology which has implications for understanding how people learn but which is overlooked in the
educational sciences.
The ramifications of this observation are amusing and perplexing at the
same time. What would a curriculum which blends the discursive and nondiscursive worlds look like? The sense of self that Harre and Gillett described
brings the role of the teacher and the role of experience in learning into clearer
focus. Their position that the sense of self and learning/development are unified
through experience is intriguing:
The discursive thesis is that to experience oneself as having a location in a
manifold of places and in relation to others is a necessary condition for being
able to use and to understand indexical expressions. How does it come about
that these senses of unique location are the salient features of selfhood? We
do not believe that learning a language is what is responsible for our having
the sense of physical location. It is the learning of perceptual and motor skills
that is responsible for that. But it is expressed in the indexical grammar of I.
We think that the sense of agenetic position, the sense that one is the agent of
ones actions and responsible to others for them, is something that we
acquire through learning the language and cultural conventions for the
assignment of responsibility. These aspects of the sense of the selfphysical
location, temporal continuity, and agencyhave different origins but they
come together in the grammar. According to Vygotsky, the learning of
manual skills is just as much a necessary condition for acquiring a sense of
self as the learning of verbal skills. We believe that perception is a kind of
manual skill. The ability to use your eyes is a bit like the ability to use your
hands. In living our lives as members of a community that inhabits physical
space and time, and assesses each of its members for reliability, these
centerings come together. (p. 111)
Several years earlier Carl Rogers speculated that sense of self was important
when he stated that a person learns significantly only those things which he or
she perceives as being involved in the maintenance of, or enhancement of, the
structure of self. It would seem that skill development is crucial to ones
learning and that it should be integrated with, not separated from, learning of
signs and symbols, e.g., the alphabet, numbers, words, etc., a fact that
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technological education teachers have known for years. But why is this
knowledge not more widely researched/analyzed, and recognized?
Analyzing Experiential Learning
Conceptual analysis as a technique is used by philosophers to analyze
illusive phenomena. By asking what questions and relentlessly dissecting the
answers until a residue can be identified, they attempt to reveal the truth about a
phenomenon. The methodology employs a test known as the necessary and
sufficient conditions test. In this instance, what would be the necessary and
sufficient conditions for experiential learning to exist? The following list of six
conditions were developed by a class of post baccalaureate students at the
Faculty of Education, The University of Western Ontario, through a group
brainstorming exercise. The students were asked to identify, based on personal
experience, what they considered the characteristics of learning through
experience to be when they themselves felt such learning took place. Experiential learning was defined as learning which combined mental, emotional, and
physiological stimuli. These necessary and sufficient conditions for experiential
learning were organized and distilled from a range of individual and group
responses.
1. There must be a balance of aural, visual, tactile, olfactory, and
emotional stimuli.
2. Learning involves observing, doing, or living through things (it is
associated with skill development, practical knowledge, and
actionthe result or residue of experiential learning is the long term
memory associated with it).
3. Intrinsic motivation transcends extrinsic motivation.
The learner, in some significant respect, is the initiator of the
learning.
The learning process, in some respect, is perceived to be
controlled by the learner.
The goals of the learning process, to some extent, are thought to
be the learners goals.
Accountability for the learning act or actions is the perceived
province of the learner.
4. Analysis and reflection are a significant part of the learning act, i.e.,
the learner values what he/she is learning and there is an extension
to that learning (the analysis and reflection gained from an
experience extend it to a larger context and vice-versa).
5. The nature of the learning process itself is such that it is often
associated with objectivity, subjectivity, and open-endedness
[learning by experience is a trial and error process which is
essentially indefinite by natureAristotle (cited in Kansanen, Tirri,
Meri, Krokfors, Husu, &Jyrhama, 1997)].
6. There is sustainability and consistency associated with the learning
(the learning act is not characterized as being associated with
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Merriam, S. B., & Clark, M. C. (1993). Learning from Life Experience: What
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