Constructivist
Learning Theory
The Museum
and the Needs of People
CECA (International Committee of Museum Educators) Conference
Jerusalem Israel, 15-22 October 1991
Prof. George E. Hein
Lesley College. Massachusetts USA
Introduction
The latest catchword in educational circles is "constructivism, " applied
both to learning theory and to epistemology---both to how people
learn, and to the nature of knowledge.1,2 We don't
need to succumb to each new fad, but we do need to think about
our work in relation to theories of learning and knowledge. So
we need to ask: what is constructivism, what does it have to
tell us that is new and relevant, and how do we apply it to our
work? As far as I can see, there is nothing dramatically new
in constructivism: the core ideas expressed by it have been clearly
enunciated by John Dewey among others, but there is a new, widespread
acceptance of this old set of ideas. and new research in cognitive
psychology to support it. I would like to give a brief exposition
of ideas central to constructivism and widely accepted today
by educators. curriculum developers and cognitive psychologists,
and then suggest what they mean for museum educators.
Constructivism
What is meant by constructivism? The term refers to the idea
that learners construct knowledge for themselves---each learner
individually (and socially) constructs meaning---as he or
she learns. 3 Constructing meaning is learning;
there is no other kind. The dramatic consequences of this
view are twofold;
1) we have
to focus on the learner in thinking about learning (not on
the subject/lesson to be taught):
2) There
is no knowledge independent of the meaning attributed to experience
(constructed) by the learner, or community of learners.
Let me discuss
the second point first because, although it appears radical
on an everyday level, it is a position which has been frequently
adopted ever since people began to ponder epistemology. If
we accept constructivist theory (which means we are willing
to follow in the path of Dewey, Piaget and Vigotsky among others),
then we have to give up Platonic and all subsequent realistic
views of epistemology. We have to recognize that there is no
such thing as knowledge "out there" independent of the knower,
but only knowledge we construct for ourselves as we learn. 4 Learning
is not understanding the "true" nature of things, nor is it
(as Plato suggested) remembering dimly perceived perfect ideas,
but rather a personal and social construction of meaning out
of the bewildering array of sensations which have no order
or structure besides the explanations (and I stress the plural)
which we fabricate for them.
I'm sure
that many of you have had philosophy courses which have exposed
you to these concepts, and you may accept this basic premise
that there is no such entity as a Ding an sich whether or not
we can perceive it. Yet we all tend to remain closet realists,
and refute Bishop Berkeley, as Samuel Johnson did, by kicking
the stone and feeling real pain. The more important question
is, does it actually make any difference in our everyday work
whether deep down we consider knowledge to be about some "real" world
independent of us, or whether we consider knowledge to be of
our own making? The answer is yes, it does make a difference,
because of the first point I suggested above: in our profession
our epistemological views dictate our pedagogic views.
If we believe
that knowledge consists of learning about the real world out
there, then we endeavor first and foremost to understand that
world, organize it in the most rational way possible, and,
as teachers, present it to the learner. This view may still
engage us in providing the learner with activities, with hands-on
learning, with opportunities to experiment and manipulate the
objects of the world, but the intention is always to make clear
to the learner the structure of the world independent of the
learner. We help the learner understand the world. but we don't
ask him to construct his or her own world.
The great
triumph of Western intellectual history from the Enlightenment
until the beginning of the 2Oth century rested on its ability
to organize the knowledge of the world in a rational way independent
of the learner, determined by some structure of the subject.
Disciplines were developed, taxonomic schemes established,
and all these categories were viewed as components of a vast
mechanical machine in which the parts could be explained in
terms of their relationship to each other, and each part contributed
to making the whole function smoothly. Nowhere in this description
does the learner appear. The task of the teacher was to make
clear to the learner the working of this machine and any accommodation
to the learner was only to account for different appropriate
entry points for different learners.
However,
as I have indicated above, constructivist theory requires that
we turn our attention by 180 degrees we must turn our back
on any idea of an all-encompassing machine which describes
nature and instead look towards all those wonderful, individual
living beings---the learners---each of whom creates his or
her own model to explain nature. If we accept the constructivist
position we are inevitably required to follow a pedagogy which
argues that we must provide learners with the opportunity to:
a) interact with sensory data, and b) construct their own world. 5
This second
point is a little harder for us to swallow, and most of us
constantly vacillate between faith that our learners will indeed
construct meaning which we will find acceptable (whatever we
mean by that) and our need to construct meaning for them; that
is, to structure situations that are not free for learners
to carry out their own mental actions, but "learning" situations
which channel them into our ideas about the meaning of experience.
A common example of the unresolved tension is our attitude
towards museum tours which explain exhibits to the visitor.
I have repeatedly asked museum professionals if they personally
enjoy guided tours, and they almost universally tell me that
they try to avoid them at all costs. Yet, at CECA meetings
(and this one is no exception) our colleagues frequently give
us extensive guided tours through galleries, insisting on presenting
the expert guide's interpretation, pace and selection to influence
the viewer's perception and learning. It is this tension between
our desire as teachers to teach the truth, to present the world "as
it really is", and our desire to let learners construct their
own world which requires us to think seriously about epistemology
and pedagogy. 6
Principles
of learning
What are some guiding principles of constructivist thinking that
we must keep in mind when we consider our role as educators?
I will outline a few ideas, all predicated on the belief that
learning consists of individuals' constructed meanings and then
indicate how they influence museum education.
1. Learning
is an active process in which the learner uses sensory input
and constructs meaning out of it. The more traditional formulation
of this idea involves the terminology of the active learner
(Dewey's term) stressing that the learner needs to do something;
that learning is not the passive acceptance of knowledge which
exists "out there"
but that learning involves the learner s engaging with the world. 7
2. People
learn to learn as they learn: learning consists both of constructing
meaning and constructing systems of meaning. For example, if
we learn the chronology of dates of a series of historical
events, we are simultaneously learning the meaning of a chronology.
Each meaning we construct makes us better able to give meaning
to other sensations which can fit a similar pattern. 8
3. The crucial
action of constructing meaning is mental: it happens in the
mind. Physical actions, hands-on experience may be necessary
for learning, especially for children, but it is not sufficient;
we need to provide activities which engage the mind as well
as the hands.9 (Dewey called this reflective activity.)
4. Learning
involves language: the language we use influences learning.
On the empirical level. researchers have noted that people
talk to themselves as they learn. On a more general level.
there is a collection of arguments, presented most forcefully
by Vigotsky, that language and learning are inextricably intertwined. 10 This
point was clearly emphasized in Elaine Gurain's reference to
the need to honor native language in developing North American
exhibits. The desire to have material and programs in their
own language was an important request by many members of various
Native American communities.
5. Learning
is a social activity: our learning is intimately associated
with our connection with other human beings, our teachers,
our peers, our family as well as casual acquaintances, including
the people before us or next to us at the exhibit. We are more
likely to be successful in our efforts to educate if we recognize
this principle rather than try to avoid it. Much of traditional
education, as Dewey pointed out, is directed towards isolating
the learner from all social interaction, and towards seeing
education as a one-on-one relationship between the learner
and the objective material to be learned. In contrast, progressive
education (to continue to use Dewey's formulation) recognizes
the social aspect of learning and uses conversation, interaction
with others, and the application of knowledge as an integral
aspect of learning. 11
6. Learning
is contextual: we do not learn isolated facts and theories
in some abstract ethereal land of the mind separate from the
rest of our lives: we learn in relationship to what else we
know, what we believe, our prejudices and our fears. 12 On
reflection, it becomes clear that this point is actually a
corollary of the idea that learning is active and social. We
cannot divorce our learning from our lives. 13
7. One needs
knowledge to learn: it is not possible to assimilate new knowledge
without having some structure developed from previous knowledge
to build on. 14 The more we know, the more we can
learn. Therefore any effort to teach must be connected to the
state of the learner, must provide a path into the subject
for the learner based on that learner's previous knowledge. 15
8. It takes
time to learn: learning is not instantaneous. For significant
learning we need to revisit ideas, ponder them try them out,
play with them and use them. This cannot happen in the 5-10
minutes usually spent in a gallery (and certainly not in the
few seconds usually spent contemplating a single museum object.)
If you reflect on anything you have learned, you soon realize
that it is the product of repeated exposure and thought. Even,
or especially, moments of profound insight, can be traced back
to longer periods of preparation.
9. Motivation
is a key component in learning. Not only is it the case that
motivation helps learning, it is essential for learning. This
ideas of motivation as described here is broadly conceived
to include an understanding of ways in which the knowledge
can be used. Unless we know "the reasons why", we may not be
very involved in using the knowledge that may be instilled
in us. even by the most severe and direct teaching. 16
The meaning
of constructivism for museums
Having suggested these principles, I want to reflect on what
they may mean for our specific day- to-day work both in mounting
exhibits and in developing educational programs.
Points
#1 and 3
Most museum educators have accepted the idea that learners need
to be active, that in order to participate in learning we need
to engage the learner in doing something, in hands-on involvement,
in participatory exhibits and programs. But the more important
point, I believe, is the idea that the actions which we develop
for our audience engage the mind as well as the hand. Not all
experiences are educative, as Dewey pointed out in Experience
and Education. This does not mean that they necessarily have
to be complex---but they do need to allow the participants to
think as they act. I recently saw a videotape of a group of children
building a cardboard ramp which would serve as an inclined plane
for an experiment they were to do. What the video tape showed
was a fifteen-minute period in which the children spent time
measuring, constructing (and wandering around) with little idea
of what they were building or why they were building it. It was
a hands-on activity that was not likely to be educative as intended
for two reasons: a) The children had no chance to incorporate
what they were doing into a larger picture: the focus was on
completing a task, which for them must have appeared to be just
one more of the senseless requirements of school. b) There was
no opportunity to alter the task to fit the meaning-making of
any individual student. They all simply measured strips of paper
24 inches long (the US is still not on the metric system) and
1.5" wide, everyone following the same recipe with no variation.
By way of
contrast, I have watched adults look at a map of England at
the dock where the Mayflower replica is berthed in Plymouth,
Massachusetts. Repeatedly, adults will come to the map, look
at it and then begin to discuss where their families come from.
(I could imagine an even more elaborate exhibit at the same
place which would include a map of the world and different
ways in which people have immigrated to the US, so that all
visitors could find something to interest them.) But at least
for those who trace their roots back to England, here is an
interactive exhibit (even if there is little to "do" except
point and read) which allows each visitor to take something
personal and meaningful from it and relate to the overall museum
experience. For me, the Diaspora Museum in Tel Aviv came alive
when I had the opportunity to call up family genealogies on
the computer in the reference center. The opportunity to view
and manipulate a library of family trees covering several generations
and a wide geographical distribution, gave personal meaning
to the idea of a Diaspora.
Physical
involvement is a necessary condition for learning for children,
and highly desirable for adults in many situations, but it
is not sufficient. All hands-on activities must also pass the
test of being minds-on---they must provide something to think
about as well as something to touch.
Point
#2
The idea that we learn to learn as we learn, that we begin to
understand organizing principles as we use them, is not terribly
radical to most of us, but I believe that there is an important
manner of formulating it that can help us, which sometimes eludes
us: What are we assuming about our visitors' ability to learn
(to organize knowledge) when we present exhibits to them? What
organizing schemes do we attribute to them, that may or may not
be available to them? Let me give you an example. During the
last year we have been observing visitors at the Boston Museum
of Science interacting with a series of exhibits developed originally
at the Exploratorium in San Francisco. We asked them what they
thought of the exhibits. Some visitors did not have the tools
they needed to get the concept of the exhibit. I don't mean that
they did not understand the concept (that will be my next point)
but that they did not have the organizing principles, and thus
the learning tools.
For example,
there are exhibits which require visitors to turn knobs which
will cause a component of the exhibit to move or change. Not
all visitors are clear about the relationship between the knob
and what it does. The exhibit is intended to explain a causal
relationship between two variables in nature; one variable
is altered by turning the knob and that change then causes
the other variable to respond and vary. But if the visitor
does not understand about knobs and what they do, then the
message of the exhibit cannot possibly be understood.
A similar
issue concerns chronologies and time lines, which are common
devices in history museums. Do we know that our visitors understand
chronology? Are we positive that our visitors can appreciate
a time line, for example, and can recognize that the distribution
of dates in linear space may be intended to approximate their
distribution in chronological time? There is considerable evidence
that at least some visitors (i.e. children) cannot follow such
reasoning; there is less evidence that any significant number
of visitors can. 17 Maybe we need to teach our visitors
to understand time lines through simple examples before we
present them with complex charts that span thousands of years.
Ayala Gordon discussed this issue when she pointed out that
in order to allow children to experience a sense of time, the
Youth Wing at the Israel Museum arranged exhibits so that children
and parents would talk about changes in their lifetimes.
Points
#4 and 5
Learning is a social activity. To what extent do we recognize
that people learn as they speak and interact with each other?
In evaluating an interactive exhibit at the Boston Museum of
Science in which people could get information through a variety
of modalities---they could read labels, listen to tapes, smell
animal smells, touch animal mounts and manipulate interactive
exhibit components-- -we noted that individual visitors preferred
different learning modes. In family groups, the conversations
became more democratic, and involved more members after all these
modalities were installed, as family members shared, discussed
and confirmed what each had learned while perusing his or her
preferred modality.
We need to
ask what have we build into the exhibit that encourages visitors
to discuss, to share, to find out together. Has the architecture
and exhibit arrangement encouraged discussion? Some art museums
have a quiet air like a church, discouraging active debate
and verbal interaction. The quiet may be appropriate for individual
contemplation of pictures, but perhaps these museums could
provide other rooms, close to the galleries, and fitted out
with reproductions' reference materials or other reminders
of the paintings, which would encourage dialogue.
Point
#6
This is really an elaboration of the point made previously about
learning to learn as one learns. Our visitors need ''hooks"---connections---in
exhibits to help them understand the messages intended. An experienced
museum-goer or a person knowledgeable on a given subject can
be enlightened easily. But what does it mean for a naive visitor
to be confronted with a whole case containing may objects? Of
what value is it to the naive visitor to be invited to push this
button or read a sophisticated label?
It is important
for exhibits to provide different kinds of entry points, using
various sensory modes, different kinds of stimuli, to attract
a wide range of learners. In teaching people to read, the use
of different words which have powerful connections for individuals
was dramatically described years ago by Sylvia Ashton-Warner18
and widely emulated since. Eurydice Retsila described a program
in which children served as young ethnographers, developing
individual projects of interest to them with the "assistance"
of university students.
Point
#7
Perhaps no other issue in constructivism raises more questions
than the concern with finding the right level at which to engage
the learner. Vigotsky spoke of the "zone of proximal development," 19an
unfortunately cumbersome term which refers to a level of understanding
that is possible when a learner engages in a task with the help
of a more expert peer (i.e. a teacher). People learn as they
are stretched beyond their own knowledge but only within a range
that is within their grasp given what knowledge and skills they
bring to a task.
Point
#8
Finally there is the issue of time to learn, time to reflect
and time to revisit an idea. Museum educators have grappled with
this problem and find it a particularly challenging one, since
our audiences are free to come and go, and large fractions of
them are tourists who many never return. Museum galleries are
not designed as places to linger, despite our desire to have
visitors spend more time there. I was impressed to note in the
slide Michael Cassin showed yesterday that the National Gallery
at the turn of the century had many chairs scattered around the
gallery for people to sit in and contemplate the pictures. What
do we do for the visitors who wish to stay with a topic longer?
How have we organized our museums to accommodate them? To what
extent have we provided additional resources (in addition to
items which we are eager to sell to them in the nearby shop)
that can satisfy the interested visitors' concerns that arise
on the next day or a week after the visit?
I believe
that an important issue for we, as museum educators is to tackle
the problem of increasing the time possible for visitors to
interact with our exhibits and reflect on them, revisit them
(in the mind if not directly) and therefore internalize their
messages to us.
Conclusion
The principles of constructivism, increasingly influential in
the organization of classrooms and curricula in schools,
can be applied to learning in museums. The principles appeal
to our modern views of learning and knowledge but conflict
with traditional museum practices. We need to reflect on
our practice in order to apply these ideas to our work.
References
1 I will document this paper with quotes from relevant publications.
See these for additional information on constructivism and
its application in education. I have also indicated how the
views in this paper relate to a number of ether presentations
at this conference.
2 "Constructivism
asserts two main principles whose applications have far-reaching
consequences for the study of cognitive development and learning
as well as for the practice of teaching, psychotherapy, and
interpersonal management in general. The two principles are
(1) knowledge is mot passively received but actively built
up by the experiential world, not the discovery of ontological
reality." International Encyclopedia of Education. "Constructivism
In Education," 1987.
3 The ideas
I will discuss here have been touched upon by other speakers
at this conference, for example Tomislav Sola in his general
orientation; Samuel Sas stated that "in the modem Museum the
visitor is at the center, not the object;" Maria Horta Baretto
stressed that the meaning of an object is given to it by the
viewer; and Yaron Ezrahi discussed the subjectivity of the
images of science.
4 Every genuine
experience has an active side which changes in some degree
the objective conditions under which experiences are had. The
difference between civilization and savagery to take an example
on a large scale is found in the degree in which previous experiences
have changed the objective conditions under which subsequent
experiences take place." J. Dewey. Experience and Education. Kappa
Delta Pi, 1938.
"If the view
is adopted that 'knowledge' is the conceptual means to make
sense of experience rather than the 'representation' of something
that is supposed to lie beyond it, this shift of perspective
brings with it an important corollary: the concepts and relations
in terms of which we perceive and conceive the experiential
world are necessarily generated by ourselves. In this sense
we are responsible for the world we are experiencing." E. von
Glaserfield. "An exposition of Constructivism: Why some like
it radical" in R. B. Davis. C.A. Maher and N. Noddings, editors. Constructivist
Views of the Teaching and Learning of Mathematics. Washington,
D.C. National Council of Teachers of Mathematics, 1991.
5 As a participant
stated in our discussion group, "History is made by people:
it isn't a collection of facts." or as Avner Shalev stated "The
role of education is not to instruct but tutorial: an approach
that allows the visitor to be a consumer."
6 The meanings
that learners construct do, in fact, concentrate on a limited
number of conclusions. This is related to the notion that learning
is social, as it happens within a culture, and perhaps for
other reasons as well. A discussion of why certain views appear
repeatedly is beyond the scope of this paper. That they do
is evident when we consider, for example, the consistent Aristotelian" views
in naive science explanations.
7 "Study
is effectual in the degree in which the pupil realizes the
place of the numerical truth he is dealing with in carrying
to fruition activities in which he is concerned. This connection
of an object and a topic with the promotion of an activity
having a purpose is the first and last word of a genuine theory
of interest in education."
J. Dewey. Democracy and Education. MacMillan, 1916.
8 "The most
important message modern research on the nature of thinking
is that the kinds of activities traditionally associated with
thinking are not limited to advanced levels of development.
Instead these activities are an intimate part of even elementary
levels of reading, mathematics and other branches of learning." L.B.
Resnick . Learning to Think. Washington, D.C.: National
Academy Press.
9 ''The object
enters into dialog with the learner only after being transformed
by him or her. In fact, it is the set of significant units
organized by the learner and the relationships that he or she
constructs between them that constitutes the cognitive object
that, in turn, constitutes knowledge." A Henriques. "Experiments
in Teaching,"
in E. Duckworth, J. Easley, D. Hawkins and A Henriques. Science
Education: A Minds On Approach to the Elementary Years. Erlbaum,
1990.
10 "The relationship
between thought and word is not a thing but a process. a continual
movement back and forth from thought to word and from word
to thought: .... thought is not merely expressed in words;
it comes into existence through them." L.V. Vigotsky. Thought
and Language. Cambridge, MA. MIT Press, 1962.
11 "Vigotsky
was proposing that children's understanding is shaped not only
through adaptive encounters with the physical world but through
interactions between people in relation to the world---a world
not merely physical and apprehended by the senses, but cultural,
meaningful and significant, and made so primarily by language.
Human knowledge and thought are themselves therefore fundamentally
cultural, deriving their distinctive properties form the nature
social activity, of language, discourse and other cultural
forms." D. Edwards and N. Mercer. Common Knowledge: The
Development of Understanding in the Classroom. London:
Methuen, 1987.
12 As Mooly
Broog stated in the discussion group "When you say Jerusalem,
what is the visitor's concept? Each visitor, from a different
community, has a totally different idea of what the city is."
13 "A fundamental
way of changing the requirements for success on a particular
task is to recontextualize the text presented to, and understood
by, the learner. In all sample cases, the subject is initially
presented with the activity---the whole task---embedded in,
contextualized as part of some larger activity. For the subjects
themselves, the recontextualization involves familiar scripts
and human intentions." M. Cole and P. Griffin. Contextual
Factors in Education. Madison, WI: Wisconsin Center for
Educational Research, 1987.
14 Maria
Baretto referred to this point when she stated that "we cannot
identify and recognize what we don't already know ."
15 "We can
learn most easily when we already know enough to have organizing
schemas in L.B. Resnick and L.E Klopfer, editors. Towards
the Thinking Curriculum: Current Cognitive Research. 1989
ASCD Yearbook. Alexandria, VA: American Association for Curriculum
Development, 1989.
16 "Research...
confirmed that acquiring skills and strategies, no matter how
good one became at them, would not make one into a competent
reader, writer, problem solver or thinker... The habit or disposition
to use the skill and strategies, and the knowledge of when
they are applied, needed to be developed as well." Resnick
and Klopfer., op cit.
17 Increasingly
we find that the limitations of timing described by Piaget
extend longer into adulthood than Piaget would have had us
believe. Research by Shayler and Adey suggests that English
children shift from concrete to hypothetical-deductive later
than Piaget argued; a considerable amount of research on college
students indicates that many are still in concrete stages,
and work with adults on science concepts often indicates that
they hold "childish" views on a range of topics.
18 Teacher. New
York. Simon & Schuster, 1963.
19 "...the
distance between the actual developmental level as determined
by independent problem solving and the level of potential development
as determined by problem solving under adult guidance or in
collaboration with more capable peers." L. Vigotsky. Mind
and Society. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1978.
Reprinted by
permission of the author.
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