|
One of the few regrets associated with my time as
a graduate student at Northwestern University was
that I never took mentor Ralph Pearson's advice to
attend lectures by English Professor Bergen Evans. I did,
however, purchase Evans' book of well known
quotations, which I used the other day to refresh my memory on
one of Yogi Berra's many bons mots, "You can observe a
lot just by watchin'." In an editor's note Evans
pronounces this a profound statement, and it is indeed true
that watching can reward us with a great many
observations. But watching alone is not enough.
Observing and learning are two different things.
I was reminded of this by an interesting conversation
during a recent trip to the University of Idaho. I observed
a painting in Dan Edwards' office and, to get the
conversation rolling, remarked about it. He replied that it
was his, done as an assignment in an art class he had
taken recently. "They didn't teach me anything, but I
learned a lot," he said, and not in a pejorative sense. We
spent the next half hour contrasting the instructional style
of the art class with that of a chemistry class, and
wondering whether we chemists didn't have something to
learn by watching how artists teach.
Students in the art class were given very
general directionsessentially no directions at all by a
chemist's standards. If I were to do the same thing, my
students would almost certainly complain that I wasn't doing
my job. Nevertheless, the art students, after some
floundering, produced very interesting works, some of which
revealed a great deal about their inner thoughts and
ideas. Would that some of my students could do the same.
But both they and I are pretty constrained by what we
think is proper and right in teaching and learning.
"They didn't teach me anything, but I learned a
lot." They did, however, provide an environment in
which learning could take place, and provide some
motivation for working with the tools of the artist's trade. And
the students responded.
I think we often are far too concerned with
teaching and not nearly concerned enough with learning.
This is not an unreasonable thing, because we have
control over teaching, while learning is something students
must do. Shouldn't we be more concerned with what we
can control and attribute less importance to what we
cannot? I think not, unless we don't really want to be
successful. It may make me feel good to do a great job
of teaching, but what benefits my students is for them
to do a great job of learning.
How can I get them to do it? I wish there were
a simple answer, but so far have found none. But
maybe something more along the lines of the artists'
approach would help. Indeed I have some anecdotal evidence
that this may be true. Last spring Lab Director Joe
March gave students in my class of 300 freshmen a lab experiment
with no explicit directions for how to carry out
the measurements. Instead they were told what kind of
data they were expected to obtain and referred to the
textbook for information that might help them to devise
a procedure. The students, working in groups of four,
at first thought this an impossible task, but many of
them discovered that when their group began to discuss
the problem, the group was able to come up with a
workable procedure. Having done so, they had not
only learned something about experimental design, but
they also felt proud of their achievement in doing
something they at first had thought impossible. Note that they
had also made the same measurements that I would
have asked them to make in a more cookbook style
experiment.
Not only our teaching styles, but also our
textbooks, reflect too much concern with teaching and not
enough with learning. We seem to think that students will
be unable to learn unless we spoon feed them with
examples of every possible type of numerical problem. Books
are apparently judged less rigorous if they presume to
ask students to develop their own knowledge by working
on problems without the benefit of an example that
allows them to follow a rote algorithm. There is a body of
research that indicates that students are often able to
answer questions by rote even though they have little
or no understanding of the underlying principles.
Bombarding them with exampleslike the ones that we used
to relegate to problem books for poorer studentsjust
reinforces their dependence on teaching and does not
prepare them well for solving real problems in the future.
I have some difficulty with turning students
loose in a chemistry laboratory with as little didactic
instruction as they might get in an art class. In many
cases health and safety dictate that students must have a
common background of information. Similarly I would
not recommend releasing students into the realm of
problem solving with no guidance or help. Nevertheless,
there are many instances where we might teach less and
students might learn moreand become more
proficient learners as well. Spend some time watchin' them.
You might make some profound observations!
|