NatureOfLearning PractitionerGuide US PDF
NatureOfLearning PractitionerGuide US PDF
Edited by
Hanna Dumont, David Istance and Francisco Benavides
Practitioner
Guide
from the
Introduction
Over recent years, learning has moved increasingly centre stage and for a range of powerful reasons. A
primary driver has been the scale of change in our worldthe rapid advances in ICT, the shift to
economies based on knowledge, and the emphasis on skills required to thrive in them. Schools and
education systems around the world are having to reconsider their design and approach to teaching and
learning. What should schooling, teaching, and most especially, learning look like in this rapidly
changing world?
At the same time, empirical research on how people learn, how the mind and brain develop, how
interests form, and how people differ has expanded tremendously. This science of learning underscores
the importance of,
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Learning
The Fundamentals
of
The learning sciences are a rich field of research that has helped us better understand how we learn.
Understanding the fundamentals of how we learn allows us to address more effectively the conditions in
which successful learning can occur.
Theoretical concepts do not yield concrete prescriptions for classroom application but good theory can
be used flexibly and creatively by teachers in their planning and educational practice. At the same time,
not all learning takes place in the classroom as much of it occurs at home, on sports field, in museums
and so forth (non-formal learning), and sometimes implicitly and effortlessly (informal learning).
Adaptive Expertise
Many scholars agree that the ultimate goal of learning and associated teaching in different subjects is to
acquire adaptive expertisei.e. the ability to apply meaningfully-learned knowledge and skills flexibly and
creatively in different situations. This goes beyond acquiring mastery or routine expertise in a discipline.
Rather, it involves the willingness and ability to change core competencies and continually expand the
breadth and depth of ones expertise. It is therefore central to lifelong learning.
There are different broad pedagogical approaches that can help to develop adaptive expertise:
Guided Learning: the teachers take the main relevant decisions about the goals of learning, learning
strategies, and how to measure outcomes, while taking care of feedback, judgments and rewards.
Action Learning: the learner plays a much more active role in determining the objectives of the
learning than guided learning; there is a strong element of learner self-organization and self-planning.
Experiential Learning: this is not controlled by teachers and there are no predetermined objectives.
What is learned is determined by context, learners motivations, the others with whom they come in
contact, discoveries made, etc. It is a by-product of the activities in which people are involved.
In order to support the progressive acquisition of adaptive expertise, there must be a balanced,
integrated use of all three approaches. Such a balance should allow for structure and guidance by the
teacher and it should create space for substantial self-regulated and self-determined learning. It
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should leave open opportunities for expressive outcomesunanticipated results from the learning
that takes place in a variety of situations outside schools and classrooms.
iStockphoto/Robert Churchill
Motivation ensures that students acquire knowledge and skills in a meaningful way. Like emotion,
the presence of positive motivation towards a learning task markedly increases the likelihood that
students will engage in deep learning. Helping students become aware of their motivation systems
and how that influences their learning leads to them becoming more effective learners. Teachers
need to remain current with what their students are capable of achieving by monitoring their
progress closely. Since teacher expectations have a significant impact on students achievements,
those expectations need to be positive yet realistic. Teachers should provide the time, space, and
support for students to reflect on the learning strategies they have used and how these have affected
what they have learned. If student experiences have been negative, the teacher may fruitfully provide
incremental successful experiences in order to compensate for the impact on motivation from that
negative experience. More generally, learning environments should aim to identify and foster
personal interests and the intrinsic motivations of students.
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1 when they perceive stable links between specific actions and achievement,
2 when they feel competent to do what is expected of them,
3 when they value the subject and have a clear sense of purpose,
4 when they perceive the environment as favorable for learning, and
5 when they experience positive emotions towards learning activities.
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7 Students
Emotions have diagnostic value for the teacher because they reveal underlying cognitions,
commitments, and concerns. Teachers who are aware of their students motivational beliefs and are
sensitive to their emotions can very usefully use this information in orchestrating the learning
process. Their own behavior and their teaching and evaluation practices trigger specific emotions
and motivational beliefs in the students, which in turn affect the quality of the learning that takes
place. Fortunately, emotional regulation can reduce negative responses and serve as a coping
mechanism. The strategies involved include re-appraisal, reframing a situation in a more positive
way, and de-personalization, encouraging the learner to be objective rather than taking setbacks too
personally.
The
7 Principles of Learning
This project has explored the nature of learning through the perspectives of cognition, emotion, and
biology, and provided analyses of the implications for different types of application in learning
environments. The research was synthesized to create seven transversal principles to guide the
development of learning environments for the 21st century.
Learners are the central players in the environment, and therefore activities centre on their cognition
and growth.
Learning activities allow students to construct their learning through engagement and exploration.
This calls for a mix of pedagogies, which include guided and action approaches, as well as co-operative,
set higher specific and personal goals, and are able to monitor them.
Neuroscience confirms that we learn through social interactionthe organization of learning should be
highly social.
Co-operative group work, appropriately organized and structured, has demonstrated very clear benefits
for achievement as well for behavioral and affective outcomes. Co-operative methods work for all types
of students because, done well, they push learners of all abilities.
Personal research and self-study are naturally also important, and the opportunities for autonomous
Learning results from the dynamic interplay of emotion, motivation, and cognition, and these are
inextricably intertwined.
Positive beliefs about oneself as a learner in general and in a particular subject represent a core
Emotions still tend to be regarded as soft and so their importance, though accorded in theory, are
Attention to motivations by all those involved, including the students, is about making the learning first
and foremost more effective, not more enjoyable (though better still if it is both).
Recognizing individual
differences
Students differ in many ways fundamental to learning: prior knowledge, ability, conceptions of learning,
learning styles and strategies, interest, motivation, self-efficacy beliefs, and emotion; they differ also in
socio-environmental terms such as linguistic, cultural and social backgrounds.
Prior knowledge on which students vary substantially is highly influential for how well each
individual learns.
Learning environments need the adaptability to reflect these individual and patterned differences in
ways that are sustainable both for the individual learners and for the work of the group as a whole.
Moving away from one size fits all may well be a challenge.
Being sensitive to individual differences and needs also means being challenging enough to reach above
their existing level and capacity; at the same time, no one should be allowed to coast for any significant
amount of time.
High-achieving students can help lower-achieving students, which helps stretch all learners.
This underscores the need to avoid overload and de-motivating regimes based on grind, fear, and
excessive pressurenot just for humanistic reasons but because these are not consistent with the
cognitive and motivational evidence of effective learning.
The learning environment needs to be very clear about what is expected, what learners are doing, and
why. Otherwise, motivation decreases, students are less able to fit discrete activities into larger
knowledge frameworks, and they are less likely to become self-regulated learners.
Formative assessment should be substantial, regular, and provide meaningful feedback; as well as
feeding back to the individual learners, this knowledge should be used constantly to shape direction and
practice in the learning environment.
Building horizontal
connections
A key feature of learning is that complex knowledge structures are built up by organizing more basic
pieces of knowledge in a hierarchical way. If well-constructed, such structures provide understanding
that can transfer to new situationsa critical competency in the 21st century.
The ability for learners to see connections and horizontal connectedness is also important between
the formal learning environment and the wider environment and society. The authentic learning this
promotes also fosters deeper understanding.
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Knowledge
Economy
Technology
Lifelong
Self-directed
Learning
with
21st Century
Competencies
Laying a foundation that cultivates lifelong, self-directed learning starts at an early age. While much of
the discourse on lifelong learning focuses on the later stages of life, it is actually the knowledge, skills,
values, and attitudes acquired during the early life-stages that provide the foundation for the lifelong
learning habit. Schools are pivotal organizations for laying such foundations, yet their contribution in
this regard has been neglected.
The same is true for the teaching of 21st century competencies. The pedagogic model underlying too
many schools and classrooms is still aimed at preparing students for the industrial economy, and is very
different from the activities at the heart of knowledge-based organizations, societies, and economies.
The curricula, learning experiences and overall environment must be centered on fostering the skills and
mindset of self-directed lifelong learning, with 21st century competencies strategically interwoven
through learning experiences.
iStockphoto/Troels Graugaard
BUILDING BLOCKS
for
L e a r n e r- c e n t e re d a p p ro a c h e s t o
technology-enabled lear ning can
empower learners and leverage good
learning experiences that would not
have otherwise been possible.
Technology also often offers valuable
tools for other building blocks in effective
lear ning environments, including
personalization, co-operative learning,
managing formative assessment, and
many inquiry-based methods.
Formative Assessment
Formative evaluation guides learners to better
outcomes by providing feedback that continually
informs the learner, the teacher, and the learning
itself. It is targeted towards three key questions:
1. Where are the learners are in their learning?
2. Where are the learners going?
3. What needs to be done to get
them there?
Inquiry-based Approaches
Students need opportunities to develop
higher-order cognitive skills. One important
context to do this is through inquiry-based
approaches in complex, meaningful projects
that require sustained engagement,
collaboration, research, management of
resources, and development of an
ambitious performance or product. Relevant
approaches include:
Project-based learning
Problem-based learning
Learning through design
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Conclusions
The Nature of Learning: Using Research to Inspire Practice reviews very extensive research on learning to
identify key lessons for practice. It summarises these lessons as a set of principles to guide the design
of learning environments, encapsulated by the following headings:
It may be tempting to respond to the principles that they offer little that
is new. In that The Nature of Learning has reviewed decades of research,
there is inevitably familiarity with many of the individual findings and
proposals. Their force and relevance do not stem from each one taken in
isolation, however, nor whether they are formulated in an unfamiliar way.
Instead, their force and relevance derive from what they add up to as a whole.
We would go further to assert that,