Ed 070958
Ed 070958
CONCEPTUAL LEARNING:
FROM MOLLUSKS
TO ADULT EDUCATION
Syracuse University
PUBLICATIONS IN CONTINUING EDUCATION
and
ERIC CLEARINGHOUSE ON ADULT EDUCATION
A Publication in Continuing Education
Syracuse University
by
Robert A. Carlson
Associate Professor of Continuing Education
University of Saskatchewan
March, 1973
Syracuse University
PUBLICATIONS IN CONTINUING EDUCATION
and
ERIC CLEARINGHOUSE ON ADULT EDUCATION
t
OCCASIONAL PAPERS
Syracuse University
PUBLICATIONS IN CONTINUING EDUCATION
and
ERIC CLEARINGHOUSE ON ADULT EDUCATION
PREFACE
Stanley M. Grabowski
Director
ERIC Clearinghouse on Adult Education
Hi
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Preface iii
I. Historical and Philosophical Analysis of Conceptual Learning in Its
Intellectual and Political Context 1
Introduction 1
Experiential Learning Influential in
Adult Education 2
Conceptual Learning Popular in Schooling 3
Jerome Bruner to the Rescue 4
Mollusks and "The Order of Things" 5
From Action to Reaction in Schooling 6
Meanwhile, Back at Adult Education 8
Some Philosophical Considerations 9
Others Should be Wary, Too 12
II. The Literature of Conceptual Learning. 15
The Literature of Discontent 15
The Literature of Advocacy, Theory-Building
and Research 16
Adult Education 15
Selected Works of Jerome S. Bruner 20
Selected Works By and About Jean Piaget. . 23
A Few Other Writings Regarding Conceptual
Learning 25
Conceptual Learning in the Schools 26
The Literature of How to Teach via The
Conceptual Learning Theory and Technique. . .27
The Literature of Criticism 29
The Literature of General Background 32
HISTORICAL AND PHILOSOPHICAL ANALYSIS OF CONCEPTUAL
LEARNING IN ITS INTELLECTUAL AND POLITICAL CONTEXT
"I want to organize a concept cir us. I want concepts jumping through
hoops, balancing on tight-ropes, and clowning about. I want concepts up
on their hind legs, and doing other peculiar things which concepts were
never meant to do."
-Edward De Bono, a conceptual learning
advocate, writing in The Times Educational
Supplement, 1971
Introduction
Every so often an idea comes along which shakes the halls of educa-
tion. It is usually presented as an innovation whether or not the idea is
particularly new. On the basis of recent events, it seems reasonable to
assume that conceptual learning will likely become the next idea to
receive aggressive promotion as an "innovation" for adoption by the
forward-looking adult educator.
Advocacy of conceptual learning is already unde,-way in adult educa-
tion, usually in the name of improved efficiency. It is argued with force
and logic that learning by concepts enables the adult education participant
to find meaningful relationships among ideas. It avoids wasting time
learning masses of isolated facts about a subject. "By a careful analysis
of the structure of knowledge," proponents contend, "it is possible to
discover certain km concepts distinguished by their power to epitomize
important common features of a large number of more particular ideas.
Such concepts are basic central ideas an understanding of which opens
the door to an effective grasp of the entire field of knowledge" (42). To
further learning efficiency, according to this theory, the adult educator
should ferret out and teach the key ideas regarding the subject matter
at hand. Such a relatively simple and powerful argument is likely to
provide the conceptual learning movement with its day in adult education
just as it has done already on other levels of education.
This literature review prvoses to offer the practitioner and student
of adult education an ove :view of conceptual learning. It will trace the
movement's intellectual and political growth. It will list recent seminal
studies in the field and present a series of relatively non-technical in-
terpretations of them. It will pinpoint the small amount of literature
thus far ,roduced r.slating conceptual learning directly to adult education.
Perhaps most important of all, it will suggest a number of philosophical
implications behind conceptual learning, implications which the adult
educator may wish to consider in deciding whether or in what form to
adopt such a point of view.
The purpose of this literature review is to provide he student and
practitioner of adult education with an historical-philosophical perspective
regarding conceptual learning. It is not a "how to" analysis although
much of the remarkably skimpy literature on how to teach conceptually
1
is included. The analysis of the literature is concerned primarily with
the more basic question of whether the adult educator should attempt to
incorporate conceptual learning into his practice. It concludes that some
practitioners may be ji.stified in rejecting conceptual learning if in con-
flict with their basic philosophies and life styles, while others may well
find much of value in it.
This review will deal with conceptual learning both as a tool used by
practitioners of adult education and as a way of organizing the content
of the field of adult education for training the practitioners themselves.
These two areas are aspects of the same larger issue. Examples will
be drawn from both these areas in analyzirg the overall issue of conceptual
learning in adult education.
Development of interest in conceptual learning for adult education
will be traced to its popularity in schooling and in the subject matter fields.
A brief history of conceptual learning in schooling will be presented to
highlight the influence of the school in this area. It will facilitate a
partial listing of promotional literature for conceptual learning related
to specific subject matters, a literature that may be of value to some in
adult education. Most important of all, the brief background of con-
ceptual learning in schooling to be presented here will provide adult
educators with a study that suggests caution regarding the adoption of
approaches associated with it.
Experiential Learning Influential in Adult Education
In recent years the leadership in adult education has been under the
sway of another forceful idea -- a notion that may be termed experiential
learning. It has been called many things, including the discussion
method, the laboratory method, group dynamics, and group processes.
Its roots in North America could be traced to the educational philosophy
promulgated by the influential John Dewey. Widely practiced and ad-
vocated prior to World War II by seminal practitioners of adult education
such as Eduard Lindeman and vigorously promoted after the war by the
group dynamics movement, this approach tended to put the adult and
his life experiences ahead of any body of knowledge or so-called discipline
of learning. It has inclined to view the adult as a relatively autonomous
individual whose experience is crucial in making sense out of his life,
his job, his leisure, his world, or whatever subject area he chooses to
study via an institution of adult education. In experiential learning
theory the individual learner and his opinions take priority over all
other factors, including subject matter.
The high visibility level of experiential learning within adult educa-
tion gave the field a reputation as a relatively open enterprise but caused
academic embarrassment for some analysts of the field (1). Critics
characterized the discussion methoi as a pooling of ignorance. They
feared that the laboratory approach functioned without a proper intellectual
2
content or theoretical base. Despite the efforts of such subject-matter-
oriented critics, experiential learning continued to dominate at the
leadership level in adult education.
After 1964, however, a smattering of materials appeared relating
conceptual learning theory directly to the field of adult education (6-16,
63, and 65-67). Responsible in part for this development was the in-
creasing interest of schoolmen in programs to "upgrade" the adult poor.
Many of these schoolmen had already been deeply influenced by conceptual
learning notions that abounded in the literature and the rhetoric of their
work with young people in the schools. It was natural that they might
attempt to apply these notions to their adult clientele. As public moneys
came more i,' use for adult education, furthermore, it seemed increasingly
necessary to provide the public with at least the illusion of proof that the
programs were efficient, economical, and successful. This flirtation
by adult education with what schoolmen called accountability also helped
to further the field's involvement in conceptual learning, an approach
that possessed more potential than experiential learning for providing
appearances of academic rigor and economic soundness.
There was also a crucial need at this time for an image of academic
rigor in university programs for the training of adult education practi-
tioners. In the late 1960's and early 1970's the leadership in the field
was pressing for a wider acceptance of adult education as a university
discipline. It was difficult to get tradition-bound faculties to admit a
field that advocated what they thought of as the "soft pedagogy" of
experiential learning. Conceptual learning offered a convenient "hard"
terminology. Increasing amount.; of literature after 1964 sought to
identify the "core concepts" of adult education, an approach likely to win
friends in academic circles. Conceptual learning thus began to take hold
at some points of intellectual leadership within the adult education pro-
fession.
Conceptual Learning Popular In Schooling
3
Conditions in North American schooling by 1960 proved extremely
favorable to the introduction of such an approach. Schoolmen had
experienced slashing attacks during the 1950's from critics whose
philosophies of education tvere unsympathetic to the dominant view of
times. They equated the educational philosophy of John Dewey the
as it was
interpreted in the schools by proponents of "life adjustment education"
with a weak, mushy, wooly-headed pedagogy.
These commentators called for a "return to excellence" in education.
Albert Lynd, Arthur Bestor, Hyman Rickover, Hilda Neatby, and
others
flayed educators for neglecting standards of excellence and traditional
subject matter for classes that wrongly sought ,o "meet individual
needs"
and to socialize children to norms the educatior.'tl establishment agreed
were "democratic" (2-5). Lynd complained that educational process,
based on real and felt needs of the students, had pushed aside the
matter of history, literature, science, mathematics, and foreign subject
languages. It had replaced these traditional
subjects with what Lynd and
the others felt was the watered-down curriculum of social studies, home
and family life education, and vocational, recreational, personality,
and
etiquette training. Demands rained down upon schoolmen and professors
of education to discard Deweyan approaches, some .cif which the critics
correctly disparaged as having degenerated into "social processing."
With the launching of Sputnik by the Russians in October of 1957, the
critics' words became enshrined as spoken in "the national interest."
Public opinion fell in behind the critics. The more philosophically
"up-to-date" the schoolman was the farther he was sent reeling. One
does not switch philosophies overnight, however, and still maintain in-
tegrity. Such considerations forced many schoolmen to confront the
practical political necessity of how they could convince public opinion that
the republic would remain secure while they maintained their
philosophical
commitments to Dewey, to education for socialization, to learning by
doing, to teaching children rather than subjects, to the notions of felt
and unfelt needs, to growth, to development, to discovery, and to dis-
cussion. Preserving these values in schooling
meant that the education
profession required some new approach and, above all, a new label
to replace the discredited "progressive education" associated with
Dewey.
4
as well as other forms of thinking, and on interesting the child in the
subject (22). Bruner's magic lay in his seeming ability to wed such
Deweyan notions as individual freedom, socialization, growth, and in-
volvement in learning with the traditionalist critic's commitment to the
sanctity of the content and its use to discipline the individual. "What
may be emerging as a mark of our own generation," Bruner wrote in
1960, "is a widespread renewal of concern for the quality and intellectual
aims of education--but without abandonment of the ideal that education
should serve as a means of training well-balanced citizens for a democracy. "
Bruner walked a philosophical tightrope. He balanced his commitment
to subject matter with an interest in the individual child's "readiness to
learn" that matter at-all the different levels of maturation. He argued
for presenting the traditional topics in terms meaningful to a child at
his given stage of development. Although the book was his report of a
ten-day conference of thirty-five scholars and educators, it depended
heavily on his own A Study of Thinking (24) and on the work of Swiss
developmental psychologist Jean Piaget (31-36).
Bruner and Piaget were the two major figures in the study of conceptual
learning in the post-World War II period. They built, of course, on pre-
vious research and on the work of others currently involved in such
study. They worked with a number of collaborators in both their research
and writing. None the less, insight into these two major figures should
be sufficient to get a feel for conceptual learning and, most important,
for some of the philosophical commitments underlying it.
5
doctoral study of mollusks, or sea shells, he extrapolate lreaS
of life his commitment to evolution and morphology, his faitn an the notion
that from cell to society all life could be understood only in terms of
structures and their whole-part relationships. He carried that mollusk-
centered bias into his psychological studies of the thinking, perception,
and learnirg of man.
This pair of psychologists was deeply interested both in knowledge
and m how human beings acquired their knowledge. Piaget, who was
seventy-five years old in 1971, found himself for more than the first
quarter-century of his work involved primarily in studying how
children learn. His direct applications of this vark to a theory of know-
ledge that would have relevance for adults did not appear in any extensive
written form until the 1950's. Bruner published his seminal study on
thinking in 1956. His research was condut ted largely upon Harvard under-
graduate students, a group he quite properly identified as adult subjects.
Soon after that study, however, he switched his interest to children.
From 1960 on, there was much cooperation and interchange of personnel
between the study center on cognitive learning headed by Piaget in
Geneva and the one headed by Bruner in Cambridge, Massachusetts (231.
Both men and their colleagues added to the literature on conceptual
learning, differing sharply at times (37,79). Piaget developed a structural
theory of intelligence that stressed the individual child and his readiness
to learn certain levels of abstractness at certain ages. Under Piaget's
theory, one would have to wait to teach a child certain subjects. Bruner,
:4' the other hand, emphasized a structural theory of subject matter more
congenial to educational traditionalists. "We begin with the hypothesis,"
he wrote, "that any subject matter can be taught effectively in some in-
tellectually honest form to any child at any stage of development." Their
respective models of a child's intellectual development posited different
numbers and types of stages. Despite these and other differences in
theory, Bruner's The Process of Education was able to fuse his work,
Piaget's findings, and the research and thought of many others interested
in conceptual learning into a series of hypotheses for improved education.
The impact of the little book was vast. Schoolmen scrambled for
their ',pies. The result of Bruner's report was general disparagement
of the memorization of facts and the encouragement of an emphasis on
teaching by concepts. To conceptualize, Bruner believed, "is to render
discriminably different things equivalent, to group the objects and events
and people arp.md us into classes, and to respond to them in terms of
their class membership rather than their uniqueness" (24). He advocated
more research regarding the possible value of conceptual learning in
the schools (22). Many of hit; readers, however, seemed ready to by-
pass such interim steps. What Bruner had termed "conjecture of how
best to aid the teacher in the task of instruction" became in practice
6
"Bruner's Immutable Laws of Teaching." Virtually all the subjects in
the school curriculum were lined up during the 1960's for inspection as
to what constituted their "core concepts" (43-59).
No longer would American students waste time on meaningless details
while the Russians explored outer space. Not only would Americans get
to the moon first; they would do so by learning about it and other subjects
more efficiently. No longer would school children learn as an isolated
fact that the moon had an important effect on the tides. They now would
discover this fact in the process of dealing with a broad and unifying con-
cept such as Newton's law of universal gravitation. Or so the conceptual
learning advocates seemed to assume.
Another concept or chain of concepts, however, would come to haunt
Bruner and his colleagues in the United States as they promoted their
approach to learning. They appeared to overlook the chain as they busily
marshaled conceptual learning to the fore in the name of national security.
What they disregarded was that for every action there is an equal and
opposite reaction.
The reaction to conceptual learning got underway in the mid-1960's
(69-80). That conceptual learning was an approach with value for some
teachers no one denied. As early as 1964, though, Harper's Magazine
was warning the public that Brumes little book was simply a set of
research proposals, not the "sort of bible" it was becoming to school-
men (80).
A psychologist soon added his own "second thoughts on concepts" (69).
Bernard Z. Friedlander of Western Reserve University, showing a
traditionalist wariness of the Deweyan aspects of Bruner's thought,
wondered about dangers in student freedom to discover relationships
that were perhaps sometimes incorrect relationships. He also worried
that many practitioners were unwisely emphasizing conceptual relation-
ships to the exclusion of the rudimentary facts and skirls he thought were
required for such abstractions. While paying his professional respects
to his colleague Bruner, Friedlander told teachers -- in an obvious
reference to Bruner and his conceptual learning theory -- that they
"would make a grave mistake to leave it entirely to others within the
scholastic community to determine what innovations should be accepted
and what rejected" in the area of thinking and learning.
Perhaps conceptual learning's greatest enemies were those who
climbed on Bruner's bandwagon without understanding what he was about.
There were many such souls. It got so bad that a serious-minded pro-
ponent of conceptual learning complained bitterly over the situation in
an article titled "Concepts, Concepts, Concepts" (74). Richard F.
Newton chastised schoolmen for dashing "madly about" using the word,
concept, as a vogue word "while paying little attention as to how, when,
and where it should be used." Facts were called concepts. Generaliza-
tions of a higher order than concepts were called concepts (62, 70).
7
Everything was called a concept. Bruner's theory was losing all meaning,
as many schoolmen did what they had always done and now simply arti-
culated it in the words of the new religion of conceptual learning.
The theory found application among some schools and among some
teachers, but it did not have the overwhelming effect on the schools that
its proponents seemed to envision. If schoolmen talked the new language
they could impress many of the critics of schooling and go about their
business. It may have been the bandwagon use of the rhetoric, or it
might have been a recognition that the philosophical and research bases
of conceptual learning were questionable. At any rate, by 1970 the ardor
for conceptual learning in the schools seemed to be waning somewhat.
8
training, community development, university extension, Roby Kidd, and
worst of all, the cohesive Cooperative Extension Service, which tends to
reject criticism from "outsiders." Their book was soon out of print.
The Petersens' publication, none the less, proved influential. While
rejecting the messengers, adult education slowly took heed of their
message.
With conceptual learning notions flooding through schooling in an
attempt by schoolmen to meet traditionalist criticisms, it was probably
inevitable that adult educators would want at least to get their feet wet.
The Commission of Professors of Adult Education, in seeking to justify
the field as worthy of university-level study, adopted the language of the
conceptual learning vogue in 1964 (7). The Commission identified some
elements it termed concepts which it thought were relevant for university
study by practitioners and would-be practitioners in the field. Some
research was carried out to investigate these and other concepts thought
to have possible utility in adult education (6-16). But there seemed to
be a cautious approach, a prudent reticence, among adult educators to-
ward conceptual learning.
Reflecting the wariness was the 1971 publication by J. Paul Leagans
and others which identified some concepts the authors considered to be
of value to Cooperative Extension workers and other adult educators (10).
They stated clearly that their presentation was not to be viewed as pre-
scriptive. They were offering some speculations, "mental anchors"
they called them, of elements in educational psychology and adult educa-
tion that might have value in the training of practitioners. Before
assuming prudent outcomes from such prudent language, however, it
should be recalled that Bruner had identified as speculations those
statements that set off the conceptual learning fad in schooling.
There are, of course, strong-minded and influential advocates of
conceptual learning in adult education. Ralph Tyler has been the primary
proponent within the field (16). He has long argued for the setting of
behavioral objectives in adult education which can then be evaluated in
some systematic way. And he is quite right in suggesting that intellectual
learning can probably be evaluated with reasonable preciseness in such
a behavioral way if the teacher or researcher defines "!earnings to be
obtained" in terms of specified concepts and their permutations. Con-
ceptual learning, of course, need not be accompanied by a commitment
to behaviorism. But, as a technique, it does lend itself admirably to
Tyler and his behavioral approach to program planning.
9
instances. Similarly, a practitioner committed to conceptual learning
could practice experiential learning approaches as a technique. Conceptual
learning approaches, however, have grown oat of the theory and the philosophy
on which that theory is based. Since the practice of any technique can
influence one's own values and theory, the adult educator interested in
conceptual learning either as a technique or as a theory should be aware
of the philosophical assumptions upon which the theory rests.
It has been shown that conceptual learning assumes that man and his
intellect evolve according to some orderly pattern and that all subject
matter has an inherent order (22, 31). This is but one philosophical
way of looking at reality. Just as much evidence, if not more, can be
marshaled, for example, to prove that the nature of things is basically
chaos and disorder. If the practitioner's metaphysics, then, deny such
presuppositions as orderliness or evolution, it is probably inconsistent for
him to operate on the conceptual learning theory.
On the other hand, a practitioner whose metaphysics deny the order
of things might well utilize conceptual learning as a technique in some
specific instance. It may simply be convenient at a certain point to deal
with some data in conceptual learning terms. Having accepted the
chaotic nature of things, such a practitioner might not worry about
being consistent although he would need to studiously avoid cooptation by
the theoretical and philosophical bases of the technique he uses.
The ethical dimension should probably be an equally important con-
sideration with metaphysics and epistemology ( the theory of knowledge)
in an individual's educational philosophy. For his part, Jerome Bruner
has found it easy to justify the ethics of conceptual learning theory. He
has argued that it returned man to the center of learning in North
America after some fifty years of dominance by Stimulus-Response psy-
chological theory (26). To replace S-R's vision of the mind as an "empty
box" with conceptual learning's vision of it as a "computer," however,
may be considered by some as less than a giant step toward hamanism
(38). Conceptual learning's image of man is that of a computer in the
process of becoming programmed with "proper knowledge" by educators.
If one's ethical values are disturbed by such a vision of man inherent
in conceptual learning, one should be wary of adopting the theory.
Even if one accepts the notion of the human being as a learning
machine, however, there are still some serious questions that might be
raised about conceptual learning. Can all subject matter be reduced to
key concepts? Should all subject matter be reduced to key concepts when
perhaps there may be certain areas of knowledge that do not lend them-
selves to conceptual learning? Are there instances, for example, when
one must deal with the whole picture to grasp its meaning? To analyze
a painting in an art appreciation class by packaging it into concepts
could possibly damage both feeling and meaning and thus destroy the
educational impact of this type of subject matter. Still another question
within the values of the conceptual learning movement might be whether
the sum of the same concepts is always the same. Does the "learning"
10
of concepts A, B, and C in that order result in the same understanding
of the subject matter as if the concepts had been learned, for instance,
in C, B, A, order?
Such questions, of course, tend to indicate a valuing of the philosophy
underlying the conceptual learning movement. Such questions would
logically tempt the one who posed them to conduct experiments to furnish
his own answers. Depending upon his findings, the questioner would be
likely to urge the practice of conceptual learning approaches in certain
instances according to certain standard p^-tterns and the rejection of them
in others. He would then probably seek the best approaches, whatever
they might turn out to be, for teaching that subject matter which did
not lend itself to conceptual learning.
It is reasonable to assume that such action would floe from these
questions, for they reflect a philosophy that those approaches which are
the "most efficient" in furthering subject matter learning in the human
mechanism in given general situations ought to be practiced by all
educators in those situations. It is assumed that one technique will
likely be the most effective approach in one situation while another
technique will be the most effective approach in another situation. The
factory's quest for "the one best way" of manufacturing each of its pro-
ducts thus becomes the educator's quest for "the one best way" of knowing
each of the subject matters.
Philosophical analysis can enable the practitioner to avoid the first
steps on a path he might reject if he knew where it could lead. It is
quite legitimate to reject seemingly objective findings of scientific re-
search by philosophically analyzing the values upon which the research
was based and interpreting tV.em, for example, as ethically lacking.
Any "factory approach" in adult education to which conceptual learning
might contribute, however, would undoubtedly take considerable time to
develop to its fullest "potential." There are other philosophical dimensions
of conceptual learning that should be explored for their potential near-
term consequence.
It is clear that conceptual learning theory has grasped a portion of
epistemological truth in the area of program planning, but there may be
danger that its practice to any great extent could overwhelm other truths
and values that have given adult education a distinctive image in North
American life. Any program in adult education can, of course, be
described in conceptual learning terms. If one wishes to engage in such
an exercise, all educational activity can be analyzed after the fact for
the "key concepts" that were discussed, even if they were not identified
as such at the time. The danger is that, having identified what are
experienced as "key concepts" by one group at a given time and place,
the adult educator then packages these notions as the truth to be presented
to or"discovered" by all groups at any time and place. The adult edu-
cator thus ceases to be a fellow learner and reverts to the traditional
11
role of expert transmitter of sacred subject matter.
The role of the teacher as subject matter expert is precisely the ex-
pectation of at least a part of the theory of conceptual learning. A practi-
tioner who assumes the primacy of the participant in adult education must
be most careful in his adoption of a theory or his use of a technique that
assumes a different order of priorities.
Conceptual learning theory tends to assume that efficient learning of
subject matter is the primary purpose of education. Acceptance of such
a notion means that learning tends to become the be-all and end-all of
education. Conceptual syntheses are offered by experts to enable learners
to get the subject matter "right" and get it fast. Yet, efficiency may not
be the all-important criterion advocates of conceptual learning suppose.
How adults go about their learning may be at least as important as what
and how efficiently they learn. Ethical considerations that require the
assumption of participant autonomy and primacy over the subject matter
may prevent many practitioners, therefore, from adopting conceptual
learning as a theory or as a technique.
Others Should Be Wary, Too
While educational traditionalists may favor conceptual learning's em-
phasis on subject matter and the teacher as expert, they too must be wary
of the theory. It was shown that Bruner brought into juxtaposition the
values of both traditionalism and Deweyism. Some values that are anathema
to traditionalists, therefore, lurk within the theory. There would be
nothing in Bruner's theory, for examnle, to prevent a practitioner from
involving adult participants, or children for that matter, as pr_rt of the
initial process of establishing what constitute the key concepts of a disci-
pline, particularly if he could justify the move as an efficient approach
under the circumstances. Such a "usurpation" of the expert's role, in
traditionalist terms, is among a series of Deweyan "anti-intellectual"
acts possible under Brtmerian theory. Educational traditionalists, there-
fore, may be more comfortable inutilizing conceptual learning as a techni-
que rather than adopting its overall theory.
Another aspect of conceptual learning should cause reflection by traditionalists
and by those with other philosophical commitments. While traditionalists
tend to favor conceptual learning as the discovery and labeling of certain
eternal truths, the pragmatic side of Jerome Bruner and of the movement
as a whole would tend to view the identified concepts as the created
"truths of the moment" (24). Traditionalists would probably be deeply
concerned that many advocates of conceptual learning interpret the theory
as positing no universal truths. It thus becomes relativist, and relativism
tends to be unacceptable and bothersome to traditionalists. What should
bother many practitioners and administrators of adult education, what-
ever their philosophies, is conceptual learning's potential use as a tech-
nique for instilling these "truths" of the moment.
It is the Deweyan side of Bruner's thought which contains this potential
12
for "social processing" so long decried by traditionalist critics of "pro-
gressive" schooling. While theoretically affirming the freedom and
autonomy of the individual learner, Deweyan thought also possesses a
deep commitment to educating the individual for fitting happily and har-
moniously into his society. This individual-society tension in Deweyan
theory often gave way in the practice of compulsory schooling, resulting
in what educational traditionalists properly identified as the dominance
of the group over the individual in educational aims. Such a situation
seldom occurred in adult education because adults generally paid for
their own programs and could withdraw whenever they did not like what
the educators were doing.
There is no reason why conceptual learning could not be used to teach
efficiently the "truths" of the dominant political, economic, religious,
or other faiths of the moment. Bruner himself saw his approach serving
"as a means of training well-balanced citizens. . . " As long as adult
education remains voluntary and participant-supported, such social
processing will be difficult. Given a change in this situation, however,
the adult educator could well be expected to add and subtract from his
concepts in the interest of whoever holds power and to use his efficient
approaches to indoctrinate the new "truth," perhaps by the "discovery"
method.
Adult educators need to be aware of the philosophical strengths and
weaknesses of any theory or technique and to exercise caution in dealing
with it. Few adult education administrators today would require a prac-
titioner to justify his effectiveness in citizenship education on the basis
of how much Latin and Greek he successfully inculcated. Yet, there was
a day when that was the practice because the vogue theory equated good
citizenship with the learning of these languages. Since neither the passage
of time nor the improvement of research techniques have overcome the
fact that theories are built on disputable philosophical assumptions, it
should be equally suspect today to require a practitioner to justify his
teaching on the basis of numbers and quality of concepts taught.
A popular theory or technique ought to be carefully considered by a
practitioner before adoption to see if it fits his own philosophy and life
style. The ethical, metaphysical, and epistemological bases of a theory
or technique should, of course, mesh to a reasonable degree with the
practitioner's own thinking, as has been discussed in some detail. Life
style, too, is important. An individual adult educator who practices
according to what may be termed an intuitive style, for example, may
be well advised to reject the theory and even the technique of conceptual
learning. To do otherwise may impose an analytical and orderly style
that interferes with an intuitive approach.
While reading the annotated bibliography that follows, it would be
well to keep in mind that adult education has a reputation for enabling
a considerable degree of freedom in teaching and learning. It would
be unfortunate if a quest for "efficiency" and academic respectability
13
were allowed to weaken that freedom. To be concerned over the potential
dangers of modish theories or techniques such as conceptual learning
is
to face reality. One need only recall the history of conceptual
in schooling. It is to be hoped, therefore, learning
that practitioners and students
of adult education will view all educational fads as they have tended,
until 1972 at least, to view conceptual learning--carefully,
reflectively. critically,
14
THE LITERATURE OF CONCEPTUAL LEARNING
The Literature of Discontent which opens this listing will provide the
reader with the political and cultural context in which conceptual learning
has developed in education. As in some other sections of this listing,
the material directly related to adult education is featured even though
such an approach disrupts to some degree the alphabetical order of the
listing.
(1) Renee and William Petersen, University Adult Education: A Guide
to Policy (New York: Harper and Brothers, 1960). This seminal
study offered a traditionalist critique of adult education carried on
by American universities. It found that the field at the university
level, clearly among the most systematic of all levels of adult
education, contained "confusion, apparent contradictions and un-
resolved difficulties. . . " Although its purpose was not to promote
conceptual learning, the study offered criticisms that rested upon
the same desire for order that underlay the theory of conceptual
learning. The Petersen book thereby helped prepare the ground for
a later introduction of the theory into adult education.
(2) Arthur E. Bestor, Educational Wastelands: The Retreat from Learning
in Our Public Schools (Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1953).
Bestor argued that schools existed to teach "the power to think," not
to adjust students to their society. An historian of education in the
United States, he took more accurate aim than many of the critics
on the exponents of life adjustment education by attacking Charles
Prosser rather than William Heard Kilpatrick or John Dewey. Bestor
reflected perhaps an overabundance of self-confidence as an educator
in describing the purpose of education. "We must remember, at all
times," he wrote, "that education is concerned with improvement.
It undertakes to change a man or a woman from what he is to what
he or she might be and ought to be." One wonders what right
Bestor or any educator has to try to "change" someone to be more
like what he "ought to be." Bestor apparently experienced no such
doubts and even had a blueprint of the desirable educational creation.
One could sense that Bestor would likely see some value in Bruner's
theory.
(3) Hilda Neatby, So Little for the Mind (Toronto: Clarke, Irwin, and
Co., Ltd., 1953). A Canadian critic, Hilda Neatby, centered her
attack on John Dewey as the fountainhead of the evils of progressivism.
Unlike many of the critics, she had no commitment to United States
traditions of democracy. She expressed proclivities for Canadian
liberalism, which she argued were based on virtues "practised before
the appearance of modern democracy in the eighteenth century."
She expressed concern that American-style democracy had replaced
blind faith in a higher power with blind faith in reason. It had allowed
an interest in equality and material well-being, she contended, to
15
degenerate into the mediocrity of egalitarianism and materialism.
In this context she was correct in attacking Dewey rather than
Prosser, for Dewey's arguments had contributed to weakening the
philosophy to which she was committed. Prosser merely helped
carry a part of Dewey's thinking into a particularly unacademic
channel. But why attack rivulets when you can try to damn the source
itself ?
(4) Albert Lynd, Quackery in the Public Schools
(Boston: Little, Brown
and Co. , 1953). A preoccupation with education as a science, Lynd
contended, had led to a surfeit of professional courses in the training
of teachers and a downgrading of their preparation itt subject matter
fields. He called for redressing this imbalance. Lynd was particularly
critical of the life adjustment emphasis in the schools. He incorrectly
disparaged William Heard Kilpatrick as the "Grand Master" of the
cult. Lynd's harsh but not undeserved criticisms were weakened by
his support of the ouster of a California school superintendent as
part of the anti -Communist hyst'ria of the time. The superintendent
had been smeared as a "progressive" educator and associated there-
by with Communism. Lynd saw the dismissal as a good democratic
action.
(5) Hyman G. Rickover, Education and Freedom (New York: E. P. Dut-
ton and Co. , Inc. , 1960). This seminal publication provided a
collection of speeches regarding the need to improve American
education made during the 1950's by the father of the nuclear sub-
marine. "The future prosperity and freedom of the Republic,"
Rickover asserted, depended on the return of education to its
"traditional task." This, he claimed, was the "transmission of the
nation's cultural heritage, and preparation for life through rigorous
training of young minds to think clearly, logically, and independently. "
Rickover charged American educators with practicing the theories
of Dewey and his disciples without a public mandate. These theories,
he contended, changed "the objective of formal education from
teaching basic subjects to conditioning children for group life."
16
and learning objectives in the development of training programs. A
sample of 211 extension agents (in agriculture, home economics,
and 4-H work) in thirty counties in New York State provided 149
incidents of behavior which identified the behavior thought to be
critical to the achievement of effective or ineffective outcomes in
extension activity. A structure of categories of agent behavior
was deveved and linked to the concepts within a structure of related
concepts. The four functional areas derived were: systems, their
growth and development; planned change and development; manage-
ment of change and development, and influencing adoption and inno-
vation. Use of the general systems concept as an ordering mechanism
provided a general model or a series of models of aspects of the
different functions and processes involved. It also supplied a way
of perceiving the role of the extension agent within the general ex-
tension education process.
(7) Gale Jensen, et. al., eds. , Adult Education: Outlines of an Emerging
Field of University Study (Washington, D.C.: Adult Education of
the U.S.A., 1964). This publication by the AEA's Commission of
Professors of Adult Education sought to justify the place of the field
as a program of study in the university. It traced a background of
the development of graduate departments of adult education to train
professionals, and it outlined areas of knowledge the authors con-
sidered of value to practitioners. A series of elements important
to the field were identified and termed concepts, including such items
as adult, learning, education, objectives, program, processes,
planning, agent, and evaluation.
(8) Burton W. Kreitlow, Basic Explorations in Adult Re-education,
Theoretical Paper No. 25 (Madison: University of Wisconsin Research
and Development Center for Cognitive Learning, April, 1970). In this
study designed to generate hypotheses concerning adult learning,
cognitive processes, and the re-education of disadvantaged adults,
the phenomena of concept attainment, symbol manipulation, verbal
behavior, differential instruction, and awareness levels were in-
vestigated. Attention focus (cognitive style) in the con,lept attain-
ment process was not satisfactorily measured. The symbol mani-
pulation process of literate and illiterate adults varied sufficiently
to suggest further testing. The verbal behavior of lower-class rural
adult women was distinctly limited when compared with middle-
class rural women in the same community. This suggested that
differentiated instructional programs should be examined. A design
for manipulating the instructional variables was developed for
possible use in dealing with variance in the "awareness stage" of
learning. This report summarized conditions which suggested in-
vestigation, the objects for preliminary explorations, and resultant
findings.
(9) Burton W. Kreitlow, Educating the Adult Educator: Part 1,Concects
17
f
18
dissertation], 1965). A study was made of concepts of education
held by 304 male county agricultural extension workers in 186 counties
of Illinois and Indiana. Measuring tools included a twenty-four item
forced-choice schedule with typical activities of county extension
workers. Rating involved the perceptions of superiors and the exa-
mination of three of each respondent's monthly narrative reports.
Significant variations among the scores, as revealed by the Concept
of Education Score, supported the hypothesis that there were identi-
fiable differences among county extension workers as to the
breadth of their concepts of education. Significant relationships
were identified between only two of ten experimental factors in-
volving educational and occupational or family experience and the
breadth of educational concepts held by informal adult educators.
The hypothesis that county extension workers who hold broad con-
cepts of education will be more educationally oriented toward their
professional responsibilities than those who hold narrow concepts
of education was accepted on the grounds of significant correlations
among the three educational orientation indexes.
(13) Arthur H. Niehoff, Planned Change in Agrarian Countries (Spring-
field, Virginia: Clearinghouse for Federal Scientific and Technical
Information, 1969). The report provided operational concepts and
guidelines for persons responsible for planning and implementing
development projects in agrarian countries. A framework for
describing or evaluating the conduct of development projects was
proposed and applied to the results of an analysis of 203 case studies
of past projects. Influences, conditions, and techniques which
appeared to affect project outcome were: 1) local cultural charac-
teristics, such as leader patterns, social structure, and economic
patterns; 2) motivation for change, including felt needs and perceived
practical benefits; and 3) project strategies, such as the innovator's
image characteristics, communication, and participation. The case
study analysis suggested that factors of special importance to success
in development projects were cooperation of local leaders, degree
and immediacy of practical benefits which recipients anticipate,
innovator skill in communication processes, participation of re-
cipients in implementing the change, and establishing arrangements
for maintenance of the innovation by the local people.
(14) Shije Orham and Norma Radin, Teaching Mothers to Teach: A Home
Counseling Program for Low-Income Parents (Ann Arbor, Michigan:
University of Michigan School of Social Work, November, 1968).
Twenty-four children attended a special half-day class when not
attending regular kindergarten, while twelve of their mothers
participated in a home counseling program. Children whose mothers
were counseled achieved significantly higher on the Metropolitan
Reading Test, and their mothers showed a significantly greater gain
on the Cognitive Home Environment Scale. In bi-weekly home
visits, parents were shown how to teach specific cognitive concepts
19
to support the curriculum to evaluate children's progress, and to moti-
vate the children to become involved in the home education program.
Approaches and techniques employed to abet parents' teaching skills
were delineated in the report, and ar evaluation of the program with
recommendations for modifications was included.
(15) Douglas H. Pletsch, Communications Concepts Used by Adult Edu-
cators in Agriculture to Implement Educational Change in Ohio
(Columbus, Ohio: Ohio State University Department of Agricultural
Education, May, 1968). Pletsch identified, defined, and applied
communications concepts required by adult educators in agriculture
to fulfill their role as change agents. An extensive review was made
of the literature, related research, and opinions of specialists in
communication, extension education, and vocational agriculture to
predict behavior needed for future competence, identify relevant
concepts from the behavioral sciences, and develop educational
objectives. Analysis and refining produced thirty distinctive units or
concepts. Real -life situations and examples were used to explain
such major concepts as affective behavior, channel, commitment,
language, message, persuasion, sender, and receiver. Finally,
seven kinds of desired knowledge were discussed as guidelines for
intensive study: communication as a dynamic process, the impor-
tance of communication concepts in educational change, the concepts
themselves as related to agricultural education, the importance of
the communicator in presenting valid information, sources of
difficulties, the sender-receiver relationship, and qualities desirable
for improving information dissemination.
(16) Ralph W. Tyler, "Concepts, Skills and Val lies and Curriculum De-
velopment, " speech given at Extension Curriculum Development
Conference, Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences,
Washington, D.C., December 8-12, 1963. For further information,
write to R. A. Carlson, Associate Professor of Continuing Education,
College of Education, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon,
Saskatchewan, Canada.) Tyler argued that three types of learning
exist, which he identified as conceptual learning, skill learning,
and value learning. All three types, in Tyler's view, result in
observable behavior change and are of value in education of a pro-
fessional adult educator. Programs to prepare practitioners, he
suggested, should teach selectee concepts that would help explain
a wide variety of phenomena. They should also teach, he wrote,
such skills as problem-solving and group processes and such values
as "objectivity toward new ideas" and the "conviction of the worth
of every individual. "
20
Press of Harvard University Press, 1962, pp. 81-96. Bruner saw dis-
covery as the crucial method for teaching people to think. He defined dis-
covery as the rearrangement of evidence in such a way that the learner
could go beyond the evidence to new insights. He hypothesized that a
discovery approach "helps the child to learn the varieties of problem sol-
ving, of transforming information for better use, helps him to learn how
to go about the Very task of learning. "
(18) Jerome S. Bruner, "After John Dewey, What?" in his own collection
of his writings On Knowing; Cambridge, Massachusetts: The Belknap
Press of Harvard University Press, 1962, pp. 113-126. Agreeing
with Dewey's complaints against empty formalism in schooling,
Bruner also condemned as "sentimentalism" Dewey's desire to fit
subject matter to the interests of the child. "To attempts justificationof
subject matter, as Dewey did, in terms of its relation to the child's social
activities is to misunderstand what knowledge is and how it may be
mastered. " Subject matter, not the student, took priority in Bruner's
scheme of things. ". . . The structure of knowledge -- its
connectedness and the derivations that make one idea follow from
another -- is the proper emphasis in education, " he wrote.
(19) Jerome S. Bruner, "The Course of Cognitive Growth," American
Psychologist, XIX (January, 1964), pp. 1-15. In a brief, albeit
technical manner, Bruner presented his theory of cognitive develop-
ment in children. He discussed some of his research to support his
thesis of the successive emergence in the child of action (enactive),
image (iconic), and language (symbolic) as the vehicles of represen-
tation of recurrent environmental regularities. This is one of the
best capsule presentations of Bruner's views on cognitive growth
in children.
(20) Jerome S. Bruner, "Education as Social Invention, " Saturday
Review XLIX (February 19, 1966), pp. 70-72 ff. Bruner followed
a relatively non-technical explanation of his theory of child develop-
ment with some suggestions for curriculum related to it. Education,
he argued, should strengthen perceptual-imaginal capacities by im-
proving "visualization -- whether related to the arts, to science, or
simply to the pleasures of viewing our environment more richly."
At the symbolic level, he wrote, education should provide "a con-
scious effort to lead children to verbal skills, to a sense of para-
phrase and exchange." He saw a need for a prescriptive theory of
how to teach for different ends-- "a theory that is neutral with
respect to ends but exhaustive with respect to means. "
(21) Jerome S. Bruner, "Inhelder and Piaget's The Growth of L:kr teal
Thinking: A Psychologist's Viewpoint, " British Journal of Psychology,
L (November, 1959), pp. 363-370. Bruner lauded the publication
of this new book,which analyzed the reasoning powers of 1500 Swiss
children. While Bruner was excited about the differences found
between the adolescent and the child, he wished the autbrs could
have offered some insights into the qualitative nature of adult
21
intelligence as well.
(22) Jerome S. Bruner, The Process of Education (New York:
Vintage
Books, 1960). In this influential book the author
put forward his
point of view that education should be instrumental to future achieve-
ment. He argued for the utility of "nonspecific transfers," i.e.,
the transfer of principles and attitudes learned to a series of sub-
sequent different situations. "This type of transfer is at the heart
of the educational process -- the continual broadening and deepening
of knowledge in terms of basic and general ideas."
(23) a:rime S. Bruner, et. al. , Studies in Cognitive Growth (New York:
John Wiley and Sons, Inc. , 1966). This book presented a collection
of papers by Bruner and his colleagues at the Center for Cognitive
Studies in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
(24) Jerome S. Bruner, et. al., A Study of Thinking (New York: John
Wiley and Sons, Inc. , 1956). This was Bruner's seminal study
in
the field of cognition. In the first part of the book the notion of
conceptualizing was developed as a theory. A series of studies
and experiments on concept attainment was then reported in
support
of the theory. In the last part of the book an associate of Bruner
applied the theory of conceptualizing to the field of psycholinguistics.
(25) Jerome S. Bruner, Toward a Theory of Instruction (Cambridge,
Massachusetts: The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press,
1966). Operating on the assumption that instruction existed "to
shape growth," Bruner sought a prescriptive theory of how to
achieve the desired growth. Such a theory would provide "rules
concerning the most effective way of achieving knowledge or skill"
and a set of criteria for evaluating and criticizing any particular
way of teaching or learning. A theory of instruction, he added, must
also be "congruent with the theories of learning and development to
which it subscribes." He saw four aspects necessary to a viable
theory of instruction: 1) specification of experiences
that would set
a predisposition for individuals to learn, 2) specification of the
most
effective structuring of the body of knowledge for learning, 3)
specification of the most effective sequences in which to present
materials, and 4) specification of the nature and pacing of rewards
and punishments in the process of learning and teaching.
(26) Elizabeth Hall, "Bad Education -- A Conversation with Jerome
Bruner, " Psychology Today, IV (December, 1970), pp. 51-57 ff.
This conversation gave insight into Bruner the human being. It
briefly touched on the differences in theory between Bruner and
Piaget. It showrd Bruner's concern over dangers in the use of
science and psychology. Of the popularity achieved by his The Pro-
cess of Educations Bruner said, "I was really something of a fraud:
I had been concerned directly with education for Only a couple of
years and had to carry the torch for many ideas that had only begun
to be tried in practice."
22
Selected Works By and About Jean Piaget
23
for undergraduate university students, was highly favorable and
uncritical.
(31) Jean Piaget, "Autobiography," in Edwin G. Boring, et. al., eds. ,
A History of Psychology in Autobiography (Worcester, Massachusetts:
Clark University Press, 1952), Vol. IV, pp. 237-256. Piaget offered
an excellent picture of his own view of his work as a psychologist and
epistemologist, including an explanation of the shortcomings of his
early research. These first studies were The Language and Thought
of the Child (1924), Judgment and Reasoning in the Child (1924), The
Child's Conception of the World (1926), The Child's Conception of
Causality (1927), and The Moral Judgment of the Child (1932). It was
his early life experiences, he wrote, that "node me decide to con-
secrate my life to the biological explanation of knowledge. " He
sought to study the development of thought as he had studied the de-
velopment of mollusks. "My one idea, developed under various as-
pects in (alas I) twenty-two volumes, has been that intellectual opera-
tions proceed in terms of structures-of-the-whole. These structures
denote the kinds of equilibrium toward which evolution in its entirety
is striving; at once organic, psychological and social, their roots
reach down as far as biological n- orphogesis itself."
(32) Jean Piaget, "Development and Learning," Journal-of Research in
Science Teaching, II (September, 1964), pp. 176-186. Piaget made
this presentation in March of 1964, first to a group of fifty educators,
psychologists, and subject matter specialists at Cornell University
and then to a similar group at the University of California at Berkeley.
In it he described his philosophy of development and his philosophy
of learning. He summed up his analysis of implications of the
research for which he had become famous. The presentation provides
the practitioner with an excellent precis of the thinking of Piaget.
(33) Jean Piaget, Genetic Epistemology (New York: Columbia University
Press, 1970). In a series of difficult but brief lectures, Piaget put
his findings in child psychology into the context of his theory of genetic
epistemology. He pointed out that this theory deals with both the
formation and meaning of knowledge. His fundamental hypothesis,
he indicated, assumes a parallelism between the history of progress
in the logical and rational organization of knowledge and the cor-
responding formative psychological processes in the individual. By
studying the development of the child, he hoped to learn how man's
knowledge and thinking have developed from pre-historic times to
the present.
(34) Jean Piaget and Barbel Inhelder, The Growth of Logical Thinking
from Childhood to Adolescence (New York: Basic Books, 1958).
This study combined Barbel Inhelder's empirical research into
adolescent reasoning with Piaget's formal logic-based analysis.
". . .While one of us was engaged in an empirical study of the
transition in thinking from childhood to adolescence," Piaget wrote,
24
"the other worked out the analytic tools needed to interpret the
results." The book sought to describe the changes in "logical opera-
tions" between childhood and adolescence and "to describe the
formal structures that mark the completion of the operational develop-
ment of intelligence." A lengthy report full of logical symbolise.,
the book clearly was meant for the professional researcher.
(35) Jean Piaget, The Origins of Intelligence in Children (New York:
International Universities Press, Inc. , 1952). This was a lengthy
and involved description by Piaget of his theory of the development
of intelligence in children.
(36) Jean Piaget, The Psychology of Intelligence (London: Routledge and
Kegan Paul, Ltd., 1964). This book provides the student and
practitioner of adult education with a concise source of Piaget's
thought regarding his theory of intellectual development. In it he
refuted the teachings of other schools of psychology on the subject.
It must be noted that it does not offer easy reading for on3 lacking
background in psychology.
25
Learning (New York: Academic Press, 1966). This collection of
papers was presented at a Conference on Analyses of Concept Learning
in October of 1965. Despite its seeming promise, this was a most
disappointing source of information.
(41) Herbert J. Klausmeier, et. al. , Concept Learning: A Bibliography,
1950-1967, Technical Report No. 82, Madison, Wisconsin: Center
for Cognitive Learning, April, 1969. Supplementary Technical
Papers Nos. 107 (November, 1969), 120 (March, 1970), and 147
(November, 1970). This is the best bibliographical source for
readers of this literature review interested in delving widely into
the research regarding conceptual learning. The vast quantity of
materials produced in this area since 1950 was identified and
screened. Most of the pertinent studies through 1969 made it into
the listing or its supplements. Many of the studies included were
conducted with adult subjects. The Center has indicated its intention
to continue issuing occasional supplements to update the bibliography.
It should be noted that the listings were compiled by a group com-
mitted to the theory and technique of conceptual learning. A major
drawback in this publication is its lack of annotations.
(42) Philip H. Phenix, "Key Concepts and the Crisis in Learning, "
Teachers College Record, LVIII (December, 1956), pp. 137-143.
This is perhaps the most brief and most lucid advocacy extant for
the value of conceptual learning. Phenix described the problem for
which he prescribed conceptual learning as a solution in terms of
a need for more efficient education in a time of crisis. The crisis
he saw as an explosion or profusion of knowledge which no one
individual could any longer absorb properly. Education's response,
he believed, had been to turn out the specialized man since it could
not produce the complete man of breadth. The result of such a
response, he charged, was a narrowness that endangered the survival
of civilization. Conceptual learning, he argued, provided the most
economical way of organizing the vast array of knowledge to meet
what he described as the primary aim of education -- "to minimize
the disparity between available knowledge and ability to know."
26
(46) R. E. Hendricks, "Concept Development in Science, " Education,
LXXXVII (December, 1966), pp. 195-198.
(47) G. H. Henry, "Teaching Literature by Concept Development,"
English Journal, LVII (December, 1968), pp. 1297-1306.
(48) G. Hubbard, "Conceptual Learning in Preparation of the Teacher
of Art," Art Education, XVII (June, 1964), pp. 10-13.
(49) J. Jarolimek, "Conceptual Approaches: Their Meaning for Ele-
mentary Social Studies, " Social Education, XXX (November, 1966),
pp. 534-536.
(50) E. B. Jones, "Conceptual Approach to Health Education for College
and Universities," The Journal of School Health, XXXVIII (January,
1968), pp. 36-44.
(51) R. A. Kiekhefer, "Conceptual Teaching of Latin," The Catholic
Educational Review, LXII (November, 1964), pp. 517-520.
(52) L. J. Meconi, "Concept Learning and Retention in Mathematics,"
The Journal of Experimental Education, =CV' (Fall, 1967), pp.
51-57.
(53) J. L. Nelson, "Concept Unit in the Social Studies," The Social
Studies, LVI (February, 1965), pp. 46-48.
(54) J. Rosenstein, "Concept Development and Language Instruction,"
Exceptional Children, XXX (April, 1964), pp. 337-343.
(55) M. F. Rosskopf, "Strategies for Concept Attainment in Mathematics,"
The Journal of Experimental Education, XXXVII (Fall, 1968), pp.
78-86.
(56) W. L. Schaaf, "Scientific Concepts in the Junior High School Mathe-
matics Curriculum," School Science and Mathematics, LXV (Octo-
ber, 1965), pp. 614-625.
(57) J.L. Stewart, "Conceptual Approach to Teaching Design and Drafting,"
Industrial Arts and Vocational Education/Technical Fducation, LVII
(April, 1968), pp. 29-32.
(58) W.V. Tinsley and M. Sitton, "Teaching Intellectual Asrects of
Home Economics Through the Identification of Basic Concepts,"
Journal of Home Economics, LIX (February, 1967), pp. 85-88.
(59) A.D. Woodruff, "How Music Concepts are Developed," Music
Educators Journal, LVI (February, 1970), pp. 51-54.
27
listed in this section, reference may also be had to some of the articles
listed earlier under "Conceptual Learning in the Schools. "
(60) John B. Carroll, "Words, Meanings and Concepts, " Harvard Edu-
cational Review, XXXIV (Spring, 1964), pp. 178-202. "I suspect
that anyone who has examined the concept formation literature
with
the hope of finding something of value for the teaching of
concepts
in school has had cause for some puzzlement and disappointment, "
Carroll wrote, "because however fascinating this literature may be,
as it wends its way through the detailed problems posed by the
methodology itself, its relevance to the learning of concepts in the
various school subjects is a bit obscure."
(61) John P. DeCecco, The Psychology of Learning and Instruction:
Edu-
cational Psychology,Chapter 10, "The Teaching and Learning of
Concepts and Principles" (Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey: Prentice-
Hall, Inc., 1968), pp. 385-427. This chapter presented a
mechanistic
nine-step formula for teaching "desirable" concepts and an equally
mechanistic eight-step approach for teaching principles.
(62) Robert M. Gagne, The Conditions of Learning (New York:
Holt,
Rinehart and Winston, 1965). Gagne prepared this textbook to pre-
sent his explanation of the process of learning in hopes that it might
be used to help make educational programs more efficient. He
suggested that eight different kinds of learning exist, ranging in
level from signal learning and stimulus-response learning at the
lower end of the scale to such higher order activities as concept
learning, principle learning, and problem solving. Achievement
of these higher order generalizations, according to Gagne, depends
upon the learner having achieved each of the lower order levels of
learning. Gagne sought to clarify some of the language of conceptual
learning by discriminating between concept learning and the learning
of principles, a term he defined as chains of two or more concepts.
(63) Mary S. Gibbs, et. al. , eds., Family Finance Education: An Inter-
disciplinary Approach, Vol. I. (Terre Haute, Indiana: Indiana State
University Center for Education in Family Finance, 1967). This
first of two volumes presented school curriculum development
as
it relates to family finance and background for money management.
An interdisciplinary approach was used, based on philosophy, socio-
logy, and psychology. Part I dealt with general curriculum
planning,
concept formation, establishing behavioral objectives, overview of
curriculum patterns, processes and procedures, and evaluation
of family finance education. It emphasized that students should
be able to evaluate the worth of what they learn and make
sound
decisions about earning and spending of money. Individual
differences
must be considered as well as utilization of appropriate materials
and resources. Family finance can be integrated into established
curricula of home economics, economics, history, sociology,
geo-
graphy, health, language arts, or any combination of these
subjects.
28
Part II discussed economic education, psychological implications of
money management, sociological factors related to money manage-
ment, and decision-making from a family unit point of view.
(64) Herbert J. Klausmeier and William Goodwin, Learning and Human
Abilities, Chapter 7, "Factual Information and Concepts" (New York:
Harper and Row, 1966), pp. 211-255. The authors suggested
practical approaches for teaching children both facts and concepts.
(65) New York State Education Department, High School Equivalency:
English Language Curriculum Resource Handbook (Albany, N.Y.:
Bureau of Continuing Education, 1970). This English language
curriculum resource handbook provided background information and
techniques of instruction designed for instructors helping students
to prepare themselves for the General Educational Development
Tests in general language and literary abilities. It emphasized
fundamental concepts and techniques useful in developing these con-
cepts. Included were ninety-nine sample test questions, an annotated
list of instructional materials ( textbooks, workbooks, and review
books), and the addresses of the publishers.
(66) New York State Education Department, High School Equivalency:
Science Curriculum Resource Handbook (Albany, N.Y.: Bureau of
Continuing Education, 1970). This science curriculum resource hand-
book provided background information and techniques of instruction
designed for instructors helping students to prepare themselves for
the General Educational Development Test in general science ability.
Consisting largely of fundamental concepts which high school graduates
are expected to retain, the publication also included some techniques
of use in developing these concepts.
(67) New York State Education Department, High School Equivalency:
Mathematics Curriculum Resource Handbook (Albany, N.Y.: Bureau
of Continuing Education, 1970. This mathematics curriculum re-
source handbook provided background information and techniques of
instruction designed for instructors helping students to prepare
themselves for the General Educational Development Test. It con-
sisted largely of fundamental concepts which high school graduates
are expected to retain, together with some techniques of use in
developing these concepts. Two specific approaches to the pre-
sentation of mathematics characterized this program. The first
was the emphasis placed on the language of mathematics as a
unifying concept. The second was the use of manipulative devices.
Teachers were urged to use paper constructions, models, and
movable figures as teaching techniques whenever possible.
(68) John L. Phillips, Jr. , The Origins of Intellect: Piaget's Theory
(San Francisco: W.H. Freeman and Co. , 1969). This rather over-
simplified explanation of Piaget, intended for the early undergraduate
university years, might prove useful to teachers of children in its
latter pages in which the author suggested some pedagogical
29
approaches he thought would be consistent with Piaget's findings.
30
(73) K. Lovell, " A Follow-up Study of Inhelder and Piaget's The Growth
of Logical Thinking," British Journal of Psychology, LH (May, 1961),
pp. 143-153. Lovell sought to replicate the Piaget-Inhelder study.
While paying tribute to the investigators as having contributed im-
portant insights regarding conceptual learning, Lovell reported that
"overall it would seem that the authors have somewhat forced the
development of the child's thinking into a theoretical framework."
(74) Richard F. Newton, "Concepts, Concepts, Concepts," Social Edu-
cation, XXXII (January, 1968), pp. 41-42. Newton seemed to accept
the notion of conceptual learning but felt it was fast becoming meaning-
less as great numbers of educators carelessly tossed around the
language associated with it. "It seems that periodically certain bits
of jargon sweep through the field of education, " he wrote, " with the
fervor of a raging forest fire. . . Today we once more are adopting
a new word for our vocabulary -- concept."
(75) Ralph H. Ojemann and Karen Pritchett, "Piaget and the Role of
Guided Experiences in Human Development," Perceptual and Motor
Skills, XVII (December, 1963), pp. 927-940. The authors reported
research they thought might have relevance to the "recent revival
of interest in Piaget's work on the development of concepts."
Their experiments with a planned sequence of experiences for chil-
dren had achieved results which opened to considerable question the
emphasis they believed Piaget put on the internal unfoldment in chil-
dren of structures in a set order. They concluded that Piaget's theory
of development tended to ignore antecedent conditions and environ-
mental variables to too great an extent in favor of the importance
of the unfolding of internal structures.
31
never prove that our ideas are right, or our actions good, or
our solutions correct; we can only discover what is wrong with
them -- via criticism." He believed strongly that his critical
dialogue approach had more potentiality than Bruner's conceptual
learning for going "beyond mere learning" to the achievement of
improvement of knowledge.
(78) David Smith, "Developmental Tasks and Adult Education," Continuous
Learning, V (July-August, 1966),pp. 179-182. This powerful criticism
of Robert Havighurst's theory of the developmental tasks of adulthood
threw into question the relevance of a developmental approach
to adults. Smith convincingly demonstrated that the so-called de-
velopmental tasks were bound to Havighurst's own middle-class
American culture. "To read the list of stages and tasks is to read
an apologia for American society rather than an outline of educational
theory," Smith wrote. He further excoriated Havighurst for ignoring
the internal life of the adult. "All his standards are external and
culturally determined." The "neat sequence of 'tasks' Mr. Havig-
hurst outlines" have little relevance, Smith showed, to the training
of adult educators. Training instead should emphasize, Smith sug-
gested, a more creative, responsive, and sensitive approach. "It
is a sad commentary on the state of educational theory," he added,
when such a mechanistic model "should have been accepted by so
many as a contribution to adult education thinking. " Although Smith
took aim solely at Havighurst's theory, it might be well for practi-
tioners of adult education to recall these criticisms whenever they
are asked to adopt approaches recommended by developmentalists
such as Piaget or Bruner. It may be necessary to guard against a
possible detrimental, culture-bound influence when the developmental
approach is carried to the adult level.
(79) Edmund V. Sullivan, Piaget and the School Curriculum: A Critical
Appraisal,(Toronto: The Ontario Institute for Studies in Education,
Bulletin No. 2, 1967). Sullivan provided a meaningful analysis of
the tentative state of Piegetian psychology. This booklet offers the
practitioner some good cautionary advice about Piaget's theory which
Sullivan's colleague at 0.I.S.E, David Ausubel, described as being
well on its way to "becoming the outstanding fad of all time" in edu-
cation.
(80) Andrew T. Weil, "Harvard's Bruner and His Yeasty Ideas," Har-
per's Magazine, CCXXI (December, 1964), pp. 81-86 and 89. This"
excellent, balanced analysis of Bruner and his work ultimately
came down in favor of Bruner but mostly because of Weil's deep
bias against professional educators. "Most of what Bruner says is
worth saying" -- despite much mediocrity in it, Weil wrote, because
"in a field where unmitigated nonsense has often emerged triumphant,
he is unmistakably a force for enlightenment." Weil's point was that
in recent years Bruner was one of the few people respected in many
32
academic disciplines who seemed able to communicate with his
fellow scholars as well as with schoolmen regarding questions of
pedagogy.
FEB 1 4 1973
tail ....;, .......t.,,,...
33
Other recent Occasional Papefs of Syracuse Uniyersit% Riblications in
Continuing Education:
34. CONSUMER EDUCATION PROGRAMMING .N CONTINUING EDU-
CATION, by Margaret Charters. January, 1973. $ 1.75. with ERIC/AE.
33. THE CHALLENGE OF MODERN CHURCH-PUBLIC RELATIONS, ed.
by Michael V. Reagen and Doris S. Chertow. December, 1972. $ 3.00.
32. PAULO FREIRE: A REVOLUTIONARY DILEMMA FOR THE ADULT
EDUCATOR, ed. by Stanley M. Grabowski. November, 1972. $ 4.00.
31. HISTORICAL AND CULTURAL INFLUENCES UPON THE DEVELOP-
MENT OF RESIDENTIAL CENTERS FOR CONTINUING EDUCATION,
by Frank Jessup. October, 1972. $ 1.50. 26 pages.
30. TOWARD GOG AND MAGOG OR?: A CRITICAL REVIEW OF THE
_ LITERATURE OF ADULT GROUP DISCUSSION, by F.W.W. Osinski.
et. al. September, 1972. $ 3.00. 82 pages. with ERIC/AE.
29. AGENDA FOR COMPARATIVE STUDIES IN ADULT EDUCATION:
REPORT FROM THE INTERNATIONAL EXPERTS MEETING, 1972.
June, 1972. $ 2.00. 77 pages.
28. RESPONSE TO NEED: A CASE STUDY OF ADULT EDUCA LION
GRADUATE PROGRAM DEVELOPMENT IN THE SOUTHEAST, by
Charles E. Kozo 11. April, 1972. $ 2.25. 60 pages.
27. THE HILL AND THE VALLEY: THE STORY OF UNIVERSITY COL-
LEGE AT SYRACUSE UNIVERSITY THROUGH 1964, by A.N. Charters.
February, 1972. $ 2.25. 87 pages.
26. REAL ESTATE TAX EXEMPTION FOR CONTINUING EDUCATION
PROGRAMS, by A.N. Charters. February, 1972. $ .75. 17 pages.
25. THE LEARNING FORCE: A MORE COMPREHENSIVE FRAMEWORK
FOR EDUCATIONAL POLICY, by Stanley Moses. 1971. $ 1.25. 36 pps.
24. LIFELONG LEARNING OR LIFELONG SCHOOLING?: A TENTATIVE
VIEW OF THE IDEAS OF IVAN MACH WITH A QUOTATIONAL
BIBLIOGRAPHY, by John Ohliger and Colleen McCarthy. 1971. $ 2.25.
96 pages. with ERIC/AE.
23. THE NEW ENVIRONMENT: QUESTIONS FOR ADULT EDUCATORS,
by R. J. Blakely. 1971. $ .50. 33 pages.
22. ADULT EDUCATION AND THE DISADVANTAGED ADULT, by Darrell
Anderson and John Niemi. 1970. $ 2.00. 31 pages. with ERIC/AE.
21. COMMLTNITY SERVICE AND CONTINUING EDUCATION: A LITERATURE
REVIEW, by James B. Whipple. 1970. $ 1.50. 76 pages.
20. FACULTY PERCEPTIONS OF CONTINUING EDUCATION AT SYRACUSE,
by Lee Porter. 1970. $ .50. 29 pages.
19. ACCENT ON ADULTS: THE SMALL COLTJEGE PROGRAM AT BROOK-
LYN COLLEGE, by Myrtle S. Jacobson and Deborah I. Offenbacher,
1970. $ .50. 31 pages.
ORDER FROM:
Library of Continuing Education, 107 Roney Lane, Syracuse, N.Y. 13210