Kirschner Sweller Clark PDF
Kirschner Sweller Clark PDF
Kirschner Sweller Clark PDF
John Sweller
School of Education
University of New South Wales
Richard E. Clark
Rossier School of Education
University of Southern California
Evidence for the superiority of guided instruction is explained in the context of our knowledge
of human cognitive architecture, expertnovice differences, and cognitive load. Although unguided or minimally guided instructional approaches are very popular and intuitively appealing, the point is made that these approaches ignore both the structures that constitute human
cognitive architecture and evidence from empirical studies over the past half-century that consistently indicate that minimally guided instruction is less effective and less efficient than instructional approaches that place a strong emphasis on guidance of the student learning process. The advantage of guidance begins to recede only when learners have sufficiently high
prior knowledge to provide internal guidance. Recent developments in instructional research
and instructional design models that support guidance during instruction are briefly described.
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THE CONSEQUENCES OF
HUMAN COGNITIVE ARCHITECTURE FOR
MINIMAL GUIDANCE DURING INSTRUCTION
Any instructional procedure that ignores the structures that
constitute human cognitive architecture is not likely to be effective. Minimally guided instruction appears to proceed
MINIMAL GUIDANCE
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working memory when processing familiar as opposed to unfamiliar material induced Ericsson and Kintsch (1995) to
propose a separate structure, long-term working memory, to
deal with well-learned and automated information.
Any instructional theory that ignores the limits of working
memory when dealing with novel information or ignores the
disappearance of those limits when dealing with familiar information is unlikely to be effective. Recommendations advocating minimal guidance during instruction proceed as though
working memory does not exist or, if it does exist, that it has no
relevant limitations when dealing with novel information, the
very information of interest to constructivist teaching procedures. We know that problem solving, which is central to one
instructional procedure advocating minimal guidance, called
inquiry-based instruction, places a huge burden on working
memory (Sweller, 1988). The onus should surely be on those
who support inquiry-based instruction to explain how such a
procedure circumvents the well-known limits of working
memory when dealing with novel information.
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MINIMAL GUIDANCE
methodology of science, which was, in general, seen in inductive terms. (Hodson, 1988, p. 22)
The major fallacy of this rationale is that it makes no distinction between the behaviors and methods of a researcher who is
an expert practicing a profession and those students who are
new to the discipline and who are, thus, essentially novices.
According to Kyle (1980), scientific inquiry is a systematic and investigative performance ability incorporating unrestrained thinking capabilities after a person has acquired a
broad, critical knowledge of the particular subject matter
through formal teaching processes. It may not be equated
with investigative methods of science teaching, self-instructional teaching techniques, or open-ended teaching techniques. Educators who confuse the two are guilty of the improper use of inquiry as a paradigm on which to base an
instructional strategy.
Finally, Novak (1988), in noting that the major effort to
improve secondary school science education in the 1950s
and 1960s fell short of expectations, went so far as to say that
the major obstacle that stood in the way of revolutionary improvement of science education was the obsolete epistemology that was behind the emphasis on inquiry oriented
science (pp. 7980).
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Stronger evidence from well-designed, controlled experimental studies also supports direct instructional guidance
(e.g., see Moreno, 2004; Tuovinen & Sweller, 1999).
Hardiman, Pollatsek, and Weil (1986) and Brown and
Campione (1994) noted that when students learn science in
classrooms with pure-discovery methods and minimal feedback, they often become lost and frustrated, and their confusion can lead to misconceptions. Others (e.g., Carlson,
Lundy, & Schneider, 1992; Schauble, 1990) found that because false starts are common in such learning situations, unguided discovery is most often inefficient. Moreno (2004)
concluded that there is a growing body of research showing
that students learn more deeply from strongly guided learning than from discovery. Similar conclusions were reported
by Chall (2000), McKeough, Lupart, and Marini (1995),
Schauble (1990), and Singley and Anderson (1989). Klahr
and Nigam (2004), in a very important study, not only tested
whether science learners learned more via a discovery versus
direct instruction route but also, once learning had occurred,
whether the quality of learning differed. Specifically, they
tested whether those who had learned through discovery
were better able to transfer their learning to new contexts.
The findings were unambiguous. Direct instruction involving
considerable guidance, including examples, resulted in
vastly more learning than discovery. Those relatively few
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students who learned via discovery showed no signs of superior quality of learning.
Process worksheets. Another way of guiding instruction is the use of process worksheets (Van Merrinboer, 1997).
Such worksheets provide a description of the phases one
should go through when solving the problem as well as hints or
rules of thumb that may help to successfully complete each
phase. Students can consult the process worksheet while they
are working on the learning tasks and they may use it to note intermediate results of the problem-solving process.
Nadolski, Kirschner, and van Merrinboer (2005), for example, studied the effects of process worksheets with law
students and found that the availability of a process
worksheet had positive effects on learning task performance,
MINIMAL GUIDANCE
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MINIMAL GUIDANCE
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This is completely in line with our claim that the epistemology of a discipline should not be confused with a pedagogy
for teaching or learning it. The practice of a profession is not
the same as learning to practice the profession.
CONCLUSIONS
After a half-century of advocacy associated with instruction
using minimal guidance, it appears that there is no body of
research supporting the technique. In so far as there is any
evidence from controlled studies, it almost uniformly supports direct, strong instructional guidance rather than
constructivist-based minimal guidance during the instruction of novice to intermediate learners. Even for students
84
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