Probing Understanding
Probing Understanding
Routledge
Taylor & Francis Group
LONDON AND NEW YORK
First published 1992 by Routledge
Acknowledgments vi
Preface vii
Chapter 1 The Nature of Understanding 1
Chapter 2 Concept Mapping 15
Chapter 3 Prediction — Observation — Explanation 44
Chapter 4 Interviews about Instances and Events 65
Chapter 5 Interviews about Concepts 82
Chapter 6 Drawings 98
Chapter 7 Fortune Lines 107
Chapter 8 Relational Diagrams 123
Chapter 9 Word Association 142
Chapter 10 Question Production 158
Chapter 11 Validity and Reliability 177
References 185
Index 190
v
Acknowledgments
We owe much to the teachers who have used and told us about the
probes of understanding that we describe here, and to the students
with whom we tried them ourselves. Their participation gives our
account whatever credibility it possesses.
Cath Henderson, Sandra Bosmans and Claude Sironi helped us
with the mechanical production of the manuscript. Mechanical does
not imply trivial. The professionalism of their work made it possible
for us to do our own work better.
Individually we record appreciation of each other’s part. This
book marks another step in a long, productive and entirely enjoyable
friendship. The order of our names bears no connotation of difference
in contribution. This is an equal, as well as equable, partnership.
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Chapter i
‘What are you learning?’ asked the visitor to the classroom. ‘Not
much’, replied the 14-year-old student. ‘Right now I have to under
stand South America’.
Presumably the student’s teacher told her that understanding
South America was what she had to do, but what does it mean? What
is involved in understanding South America, or the French Revolu
tion or quadratic equations or acids and bases or musical notation or
impressionist painting or Japanese grammar? And how could one test
whether a student understands these things?
It is important to answer these questions, since almost every
statement of aims for education, whether addressed to a whole school
system, a single year of education, a subject syllabus, or even a single
lesson, now includes understanding as an important outcome, a high
er form of learning than rote acquisition of knowledge. It was not
always so, as a comparison of present-day and 1930s school tests or
content-specific tests described in the Mental Measurements Year
books (e.g., Buros, 1938), will show. The tests of fifty years ago are
largely measures of ability to recall facts or to apply standard algo
rithms, while those of today more commonly make an effort to see
whether the knowledge can be used to solve novel problems. The
publication of the well-known taxonomy of educational objectives
(Bloom, 1956) both reflected and spurred the widespread acceptance,
thirty years ago, of the need to promote understanding. Since then
operational definitions of understanding have developed for each
school subject, definitions which spread from teacher to teacher
through sharing of ideas about tests or through the more effective
controls of central examination authorities or textbooks that contain
sample questions. Texts even manage to spread ideas so that question
1
Probing Understanding
2
The Nature o f Understanding
39. The m agnitude of their resultant m om entum after collision will be:
A. zero.
B. 2 kg m s - 1 ,
C. 10 kg m s-1 ,
D. 1 4 k g m s _1,
E. dependent on w h e th e r th e collision w a s elastic or inelastic.
40. The total kinetic energy of th e tw o spheres after collision will be:
A. 10 J.
B. 14 J.
C. 20 J.
D. 28 J.
E. dependent on w h e th e r th e collision w as elastic or inelastic.
Figure 1.1: Exam ple o f problem typically used to m easure understanding in physics
(from Richard T. W hite, 1977, Solving Physics Problems, with the perm ission o f
the publisher, M c G ra w -H ill Book Company, Sydney)
Understanding of Concepts
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4
The Nature o f Understanding
5
Probing Understanding
6
The Nature o f Understanding
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8
The Nature o f Understanding
we can divide by the number in front of the x in the next step in order
to find out what one x is worth. Sometimes it is not so easy. Why
does light pass through glass and not through brick? Naming is not
explaining, so we cannot get away with saying, it is because glass is
transparent. There are many possible examples like that one, where a
satisfying answer is hard to find. Often explanation comes down to
putting things in more familiar terms and not pushing them to fun
damentals, even though the explanation is essentially circular. Why do
things fall? Because of gravity. But what then is gravity? That which
makes things fall.
The explanations that most of us find best are those based on
simple logic or on direct experience. An example of the first is why
x° = 1:
xm xn = x m_n
=> XP - XP = XP-P = x°
But any number divided by itself equals 1
=> x° = 1.
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Probing Understanding
levels. First there is the meaning of each of its constituent parts, and
then there is the meaning of the whole, which may not be expressed
so directly and may have to be inferred.
It is unlikely that the total meaning can be grasped without a
reasonably detailed understanding of its constituent parts. A text can
not be comprehended unless the great majority of its sentences can be
converted to propositions that are familiar, or that can be related
immediately to elements that are present in memory. The relation
need not be direct or complete, so long as some satisfactory identifica
tion is possible, as Lewis Carroll’s poem about the Jabberwock will
show:
The words uffish, whiffling, and tulgey need not have been seen before
for a reader to be able to form some understanding of the verse.
The Jabberwock example illustrates the importance of images in
understanding. Humans thought in images long before they invented
words, and we still feel more satisfied when we can translate words
into images. Indeed, the essence of poetry is the use of words to evoke
images, which in their turn are often linked to emotions. Imagery is
also used in science, where complex notions are often represented by
familiar, everyday images. Thus light is represented as a stream of
solid particles, or as waves. Neither representation is exact, but we
feel that we understand better the nature of light when we relate it to
these familiar images. A useful approach to probing understanding
may therefore be to elicit the person’s images.
Communications need not be verbal. Ballet, mime, and painting
are arts of non-verbal communication, while plays are both verbal and
non-verbal (that is why it is possible to make some sense of a play or
an opera which is presented in a language that you do not know).
These non-verbal examples reveal that understanding of a com
munication is more than decoding the separate elements and checking
that each is understood. The communication as a whole has to be
considered. What is its theme, its main message? Is it a direct state
ment or an allegory? Is it transmission of new information or elabora
tion of old? What purpose lies behind its construction? Answers to
such questions demonstrate the understanding. A child may read
Gulliver's Travels as an adventure story, and understand it in terms of
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The Nature o f Understanding
Understanding of Situations
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movement. Also, you are likely to think of explanations for how the
situation arose: a crash, broken-down car, road repairs, and so on.
And you will make predictions to yourself as to how the situation will
develop: eventually the cars in front will move, the pace will be slow
at first and there may be further stops, but eventually the traffic will
move freely; and somewhere you will come to the cause of the delay,
marked by a tow-truck or a repair gang or something.
The processes of selection, explanation, and prediction that are
involved in making sense of situations can be focussed on in probes.
To test your comprehension of the traffic jam we could ask you what
is important here: the number of lanes, the makes of the cars, the time
of day; and we would ask you why they are important. Or we could
ask you to explain how this situation might have arisen, or to predict
what will happen next. O f these three probes, that focus on selection,
explanation, and prediction, only the third appears to have had much
use in recent research, while none has had widespread use in schools
or college practice. Examples in the techniques chapters are intended
to remedy that, of course.
Understanding of People
Construction of Meaning
12
The Nature o f Understanding
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Probing Understanding
14
References
185
References
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References
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References
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References
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