"The view that knowledge is constructed carries dangers-it could
be interpreted to mean that truth is dead and therefore chaos reigns.
A more measured perspective is that we each construct our own understanding
of the large bodies of organized public knowledge that the disciplines
represent. This constructivist view may receive approbation to a
greater or lesser degree from members of different disciplines.
We must then ask to what extent disciplinary context determines
student views and their development."
Tomorrow's Professor Msg.#405 STUDENT LEARNING AND INTELLECTUAL
DEVELOPMENT
Folks:
The excerpt below looks at some of the latest research on student
learning at the college and university level. It is taken from Chapter
One, Learning to Think:, A Cross-Disciplinary Perspective, pages
2-6, in Learning to Think: Disciplinary Perspectives, by Janet Donald.
Published by JOSSEY-BASS, A Wiley Company, 989 Market Street, San
Francisco, CA 94103-1741. www.josseybass.com
Copyright 2002 by John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Jossey-Bass is a registered
trademark of John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Reprinted with permission.
References available on request.
Regards,
Rick Reis
reis@stanford.edu
UP NEXT: Adopting the Administrative Portfolio
Tomorrow's Teaching and Learning
----------------------------- 1,693 words -----------------------------
STUDENT LEARNING AND INTELLECTUAL DEVELOPMENT
Janet Donald
Student learning at the postsecondary level has become a significant
international concern as governments recognize the necessity of
lifelong learning, yet struggle to find indices of what students
learn in college (Ewell, 2001; Miller, 2001). In an analysis of
trends and implications for learning and teaching in the twenty-first
century, Baxter Magolda and Terenzini (1999) point out that critical,
reflective thinking skills and the ability to make up one's own
mind are essential learning outcomes in a world in which multiple
perspectives abound and right action is often disputed. Important
learning outcomes include not only complex cognitive skills but
an ability to apply knowledge to practical problems, an appreciation
of human differences, and an integrated identity.
Theories that help us understand student learning-particularly
higher-order learning, in which the student seeks to understand
or construct meaning and thus to develop intellectually-come from
four families of research. The first, research on intellectual development,
examines how students interpret their learning experience and how
their ways of knowing or thinking evolve during the undergraduate
years (Baxter Magolda, 1992; King & Kitchener, 1994; Perry,
1970, 1981). A second theoretical approach, based on phenomenological
research on students' experience of the learning process (Marton
& Saljo, 1976), focuses on their orientation to learning. In
a third family of research, work on intrinsic motivation for learning
is linked to students' critical thinking and self-regulation (Donald,
1999; Pintrich, 1995; Pintrich, Marx, & Boyle, 1993). A fourth
theoretical approach examines students' learning goals in different
disciplinary contexts-for example, Cashin and Downey's (1995) study
of disciplinary differences in learning goals and student progress
toward them.
Research on Intellectual Development
In the 1960s, groundbreaking work on how students interpret their
learning experience was initiated by William Perry (1970, 1981).
He found that students entering college tend to display a dualistic
view in which knowledge is right or wrong and the professor is the
authority, then move through relativistic and multiplistic stages
where knowledge is uncertain and opinion rules, and finally reach
a stage of commitment where some ideas are held to be more valid
that others based on evidence. More recent research on intellectual
development has focused on changes in students' construction of
meaning or ways of knowing, from absolute knowing, through transitional
and independent knowing, to contextual knowing (Baxter Magolda,
1992). In Baxter Magolda's longitudinal study, most students-68
percent-entered university in a stage of absolute knowing, considering
knowledge to be certain or absolute and conceiving their role as
learners to be limited to obtaining knowledge from the instructor.
The remaining 32 percent of entering students were in a stage of
transitional knowing, considering knowledge to be partially certain
and partially uncertain; their role was to understand knowledge.
In both stages, students depict themselves as passive recipients
of their professors' wisdom.
During their senior year, some students-16 percent-displayed independent
knowing; that is, they considered knowledge to be uncertain. In
this stage, everyone has his or her own beliefs, and students are
expected to think for themselves, share views with others, and create
their own perspective. Independent knowing increased to 57 percent
the year following graduation. Only in the year following graduation
did a small number of students-12 percent-reach the stage of contextual
knowing, where knowledge is judged on the basis of evidence in context,
and the student's role is to think through problems and to integrate
and apply knowledge. These findings suggest that two-thirds of entering
students limit their role as learner to obtaining knowledge, and
most will not be actively constructing meaning (independent knowing)
until after they have graduated.
How a person solves an ill-structured problem, as well as that
person's concept of knowledge and process of justification, are
focused on in King and Kitchener's (1994) reflective judgment model.
According to the model, some individuals are in a stage of prereflective
thinking, in which they do not conceive that knowledge is uncertain
and do not use evidence to reason toward a conclusion. In quasireflective
stages, individuals recognize some uncertainty but do not understand
how evidence entails a conclusion and have difficulty in justifying
their conclusions. Reflective thinkers argue that knowledge must
be actively constructed and that claims of knowledge must be understood
in relation to the context in which they were generated. Judgments
must be grounded in relevant data and conclusions remain open to
reevaluation.
The work of these researchers on intellectual development recapitulates
the shift in ethos that occurred in universities during the Enlightenment
and the scientific revolution that followed it. Scholars in the
Middle Ages assumed a fixed body of knowledge; they defined that
knowledge and were the authorities (Johnston, 1998). The scientific
revolution challenged the notion of fixed knowledge. It was based
on the assumption that knowledge is an expanding and open system.
Instead of vesting authority in the church, validity was now found
in scientific measurement and dissent was integral to the process
of testing hypotheses. The shift in ethos changed the role of the
university to that of creator of knowledge-a major transformation
in epistemology that, it appears, students must still undergo. Our
studies of student intellectual development, however, have shown
that, given the choice, students have relativistic rather than dualistic
views, in Perry's language (Bateman & Donald, 1987). Students
describe themselves as transitional, independent, and contextual
knowers rather than absolute knowers, although they may also discriminate
between the role and strategies of the ideal student and themselves
as students (Donald & McMillan-Davey, 1998; Donald, McMillan-Davey,
& Denison, 1999).
The view that knowledge is constructed carries dangers-it could
be interpreted to mean that truth is dead and therefore chaos reigns.
A more measured perspective is that we each construct our own understanding
of the large bodies of organized public knowledge that the disciplines
represent. This constructivist view may receive approbation to a
greater or lesser degree from members of different disciplines.
We must then ask to what extent disciplinary context determines
student views and their development.
Research on Student Orientations
I research on student orientations to learning undertaken primarily
in the United Kingdom and Australia, the term orientation indicates
a combination of an approach to studying, style of learning, and
motivation that is relatively stable across different educational
tasks (Biggs, 1988; Biggs, 1993; Entwistle & Tait, 1990; Meyer,
Parsons, & Dunne, 1990; Ramsden, 1992). Research over a period
of fifteen years using two different inventories (Biggs, 1988; Entwistle
& Ramsden, 1983) has confirmed two primary orientations: a deep
or meaning orientation and a surface or reproducing orientation.
A third orientation-achieving, or strategic (competitive and grade-oriented)-has
been distinguished but is often associated with a deep or surface
orientation. A student with a deep or meaning orientation seeks
to relate and reinterpret knowledge. A student with a surface orientation,
in contrast, does not seek understanding and tends to use superficial
study strategies that rely on memorization and do not lead to increased
understanding. An achieving approach includes a desire to excel
and achieve top grades, which may or may not increase understanding.
Students may adopt a deep or surface approach, or both, to varying
extents, in response to cues given by the teacher. The cautionary
tale to be derived from this research is that students may prefer
a deep approach, but when overloaded with course content or evaluated
on their knowledge of facts may adopt a surface or achieving approach.
We have found that students vary in their orientation to learning
depending on their course or program, with students in professional
programs being more pragmatic or achievement-oriented and students
in pure science more oriented toward meaning (Donald, 199). Again,
the discipline may be providing a distinctive context that aids
or inhibits certain kinds of intellectual development.
Research on Intrinsic Motivation
In research on the effect of motivation on learning, students'
critical thinking ands learning strategies have been related to
intrinsic and extrinsic motivation (Pintrich, Brown, & Weinstein,
1994; Pintrich, Marx, & Boyle, 1993: Stage & Williams, 1990).
Intrinsic motivation for learning is defined as the desire to understand
or to learn for the sake of learning; extrinsic motivation is a
desire to attain an external goal. Intrinsic motivation has also
been related to student self-regulation. The term self-regulated
learning describes students' active control of learning resources
(time, study space, peers, and faculty members), motivation (goals
and self-efficacy), and strategies (deep processing) (Pimtrich,
1995). As students at earlier levels of education learn to self-regulate,
or internalize regulation, they have been found to shift from extrinsic
to intrinsic motivation (Wigfield, Eccles, & Rodriguez, 1998).
The importance of students' motivation, self-regulation, and control
over their learning environment for higher-order learning lies in
the immediate development effect of these processes on learning
and learning how to learn. Measures of intrinsic motivation have
been shown to be related to a deep approach to learning (Donald,
1999; Entwistle & Tait, 1990; Fransson, 1977; Ramsden, 1992).
To what extent are intrinsic motivation and self-regulating behaviors
supported and developed in different disciplines?
Research on Students' Learning Goals
Students' learning goals have changed markedly over the last thirty
years from intellectual to vocational (Astin, 1998). This presents
another kind of contextual problem for student intellectual development
because student goals mediate between what instructors intend students
to learn and what students actually learn, and vocational goals
tend to be negatively related to higher-order learning (Donald &
Dubuc, 1999). Learning goals differ substantially across disciplines
(Cashin & Downey, 1995). Cashin and Downey, who studied the
learning goals of professors and students in over a hundred thousand
courses in eight fields, found that despite the rhetoric surrounding
teaching higher-order skills like critical thinking and problem
solving, many disciplines focus on the acquisition of knowledge.
As might be predicted, students report that they make progress in
learning what their professors emphasize. The most positive finding
from this research is that higher-order learning goals such as learning
principles, concepts or theories, and problem solving are, overall,
considered by faculty. Student goals appear to be more closely linked
with their professors' goals than with other measures of approaches
to learning; they do not coincide to any great extent with measures
of their orientation or intrinsic motivation (Donald, McMillan-Davey,
& Denison, 1999). Disciplinary differences are most likely to
occur for learning goals.
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