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Jerome Bruner

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Title: Jerome Bruner


1
Jerome Bruner
  • For N515- by Leslie Wagle

2
Life
  • Jerome Bruner was born in New York City and
    educated at Duke University and Harvard. His
    career has been long and productive, including
    leadership roles in several landmark projects
    that had widespread influence on education
    practices. He began studying the cognitive
    development of children in the 1940s and became
    interested in schooling in the USA in the 1950s.
    In the 1960s he suggested that intellectual
    ability developed in stages though stepped
    changes in how the mind is used. In the 1980s he
    began to believe that cultural influences affect
    learning psychology.

3
Key Concepts
  • Bruner believed that detailed material is
    remembered by the use of simplified ways of
    representing it. He deplored the educational
    psychology dominant in America before 1940, which
    confused "skills" with "understanding."  Instead,
    Bruner placed "structure" at the heart of
    education  give a child a sense of the structure
    of what he is being taught and he will learn the
    information for himself.
  • To instruct someone is not a matter of just
    getting things into his mind, but teaching him to
    participate in the process of gaining knowledge.

4
Effect on American Education
  • Jerome Bruner is now widely regarded as one of
    the most influential twentieth century writers
    and thinkers to apply principles of psychology to
    modern education and curriculum theory. Bruner
    claimed that any subject can be taught
    effectively in some form to any child at any
    stage of development. A curriculum should revisit
    basic ideas repeatedly, building on them until
    the student has grasped the general picture in
    terms of the relationships between things
    encountered earlier and later.

5
His main theories
  • Jerome Bruner was among the first
    to realize that ("thinking") depends on
    placing an event or situation in the
    appropriate category. Bruner also realized that
    categories are not "discovered" but "invented".
    They do not exist in the environment they are
    construed by the human mind. Thus what matters is
    really the classifying information into a new
    category, or which into some existing category.
  • Three principles of his overall thinking are
    readiness, structure and sequence, and
    extrapolation.

6
Readiness
  • Instruction must be concerned with the
    experiences and contexts that make the student
    willing and able to learn.
  • So, a teacher might first excite interest by
    filling a glass with water and asking students
    how many pennies they think can be put into the
    jar without water spilling out. Their curiosity
    would be aroused when the pennies greatly exceed
    their estimates. This then leads to an
    exploration of many variables and basic
    principles they would find perplexing if offered
    only in theory.

7
Structure
  • Instruction must be structured so that it can be
    easily grasped by the student.
  • Bruner demonstrated that any domain of knowledge,
    or problem or concept, can be represented in some
    way (including images or graphics) simple enough
    that any particular learner can understand it in
    a recognizable form.

8
Sequence
  • Instruction should lead the learner through the
    content in order to increase the students
    ability to grasp, transform, and transfer what is
    learned. In general, sequencing should move from
    hands-on concrete experiences, to iconic (visual)
    then to symbolic.

9
Extrapolation
  • Instruction should be designed to facilitate
    filling in the gaps (going beyond the information
    given).
  • The nature and pacing of instruction should move
    away from external rewards, such as a teachers
    praise, toward the intrinsic rewards inherent in
    solving problems or understanding concepts. The
    teacher can provide a vital link to the learner
    in helping the learner develop techniques for
    obtaining feedback on his or her own.

10
Application of the Theories
  • Bruner introduced the doctrine of the spiral
    curriculum, that all topics -in some form -must
    be introduced at an early age, but cannot be
    exhausted at any age, and thus must be returned
    to in increasing depth.

11
The Spiral
In order for a student to develop from simple to
more complex lessons, certain basic knowledge and
skills must first be mastered.  This provides
linkages between each lesson as student spirals
upwards in a course of a study.  As new knowledge
and skills are introduced, they reinforce what is
already learned and become related to previously
learned information.  What the student gradually
achieves is a rich breadth and depth of
information that is not normally developed when
each topic is discrete and disconnected from each
other.
12
Legacy
  • A constant theme in Bruners work is that
    education is a process of discovery. Students are
    encouraged to discover facts and relationships
    for themselves and continually build on what they
    already know. This has greatly influenced
    teaching styles, such as where the teacher does
    not just talk about dinosaurs, but has the
    students construct models of dinosaurs, watch a
    film about them, and then discuss imaginary
    encounters with them, etc.
  • He also was an influence on the Xerox researchers
    in their efforts to create the graphic user
    interface (GUI).

13
Latest Interests
Bruner has begun to promote the insight that we
construct and we reconstruct our world, not just
with bricks and mortar, but by creating and
re-creating the meaning of different things.
This process takes place largely through social
interaction, where the role of culture is key to
shaping the concept we have of ourselves and our
powers.
14
How Bruner relates to Music
  • In 1991 Bruner published an article entitled
    The narrative Construction of Reality in which
    he argued that the mind structures its sense of
    reality through symbolic systems. The narrative
    idea has been used by one music educator.
  • The following material is taken from an article
    in Piano Pedagogy Forum by Ivan Frazier
  • http//www.music.sc.edu/ea/
  • keyboard/PPF/4.2/4.2PPFpp.html

15
Frazier explains an experience where he described
a piece by Bach in narrative rather than
technical terms.
I might have described the piece this way
In three-eight meter the
subject begins with the
right hand in the tonic key followed by
its imitation by the left hand in the dominant,
as the right hand takes the countersubject over
from the left hand. Then the right hand repeats
the subject in D-sharp minor, the subdominant of
the relative minor. Continuing the process the
left hand imitates the subject etc., etc.,
etc. But, Frazier didnt think it that would
provoke much excitement or interest in the piece,
so during his lecture I said it was lively and
frolicsome due its three-eight meter and that
the left hand chases the right through a maze of
related major and minor keys.
16
Narrative thinking and language like that can
awaken curiosity and fascination, which can
generate the energy needed to find out what it
means that the left hand chases the right, and to
explore that maze of related keys to see where it
leads with all its turns and cadences along the
way. Students may then find the motivation to do
the hard work needed for objective analysis and
diligent practice.
One student assigned characters, as in a drama,
to all the themes in the final rondo of a Mozart
Sonata, and made a simple visual representation
of each character. Her "map" acted as an
operatic narrative and a useful tool for secure
memorization of the movement.
17
  • Ivan Frazier has had success with asking his
    piano students to relate to a problem by finding
    a narrative for it. He finds that they often
    improve their playing when he asks
  • them to find a more global concept.
  • One student described pedaling problems as
  • It sounds like a change from 'stereo' to
    'mono
  • Another one said that ritenuto is when you "hit
    traffic."
  • Frazier concludes I have found myself
    increasingly alert to statements from, and
    incidents with students that show evidence of
    narrative thinking, and have started a diary to
    collect them.

18
In closing.
  • Jerome Bruner, whose career spans more than 60
    years, was not happy with the early use of
    computers (for drill and practice) in schools.
    Although he is happy with later efforts to
    stimulate intuitive and analytical thinking,
    Bruner still thinks technology has not explored
    the spiral curriculum concept in its full
    potential to create knowledge students can build
    on.
  • http//edtech2.boisestate.edu/wagnerk/edtech580/je
    rome.htm

19
References
  • (picture) http//www.doyletics.com/arj/tpoerev.htm
  • Smith, M.K. http//www.infed.org/thinkers/bruner.h
    tm
  • Raimi, Ralph http//www.math.rochester.edu/people/
    faculty/rarm/bruner.html
  • Sherwood, Emily http//www.educationupdate.com/arc
    hives/2005/Nov/html/col-jeromebutler.html
  • (4) Smith, M.K. http//www.infed.org/thinkers/brun
    er.htm
  • 5. Scaruffi, Piero. http//www.thymos.com/mind/bru
    ner2.html
  • 6. Smith, M.K. http//www.scied.gsued.edu/Hassard/
    mos/2.7html
  • 7. Kinnes, T. http//oaks.nvg.org/wm1ra2.html
  • 8. Hassard, Jack http//www.scied.gsued.edu/Hassar
    d/mos/2.7html
  • 9. Hassard, Jack http//www.scied.gsued.edu/Hass
    ard/mos/2.7html
  • 10. Raimi, Ralph http//www.math.rochester.edu/peo
    ple/faculty/rarm/bruner.html
  • 11. Kristinsdottir, S. http//www.starfsfolk.khi.i
    s/solrunb/jbruner.htm_3.htm
  • 12. Hollyman, David http//au.geocities.com/
    vanunoo/Humannature/bruner.html
  • 13. Scaruffi, Piero. http//www.thymos.com/mind/br
    uner2.html
  • 14. -- http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jerome_Bruner
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