Categorie Blog

More than the sum of its parts

First Published in Dutch on the 11the of november 2013

A scouting expedition
Imagine that you are taking part in a scouting expedition. A parkour has been mapped out through the forest in which hundreds of pieces of clothing are spread out. The goal is to collect as many different items as possible. A participant carries a large backpack and runs across the paths as much as possible. Every piece of clothing he finds is thrown in the backpack. At the end of the parkour, he arrives at the game leader. The leader wants to evaluate how well he has played the game. The enthusiastic player wants to empty his backpack on the ground, but the game leader stops him; if everyone would do this, it would become a mess. The game leader wants to conduct a representative survey by asking oriented questions. His first question: “Do you have a red sock for me?”. The participant looks in his backpack in search for the sock. After a few minutes, the game leader stops him and puts a firm line across his check list; there is a time limit for each question, because he has several more questions to ask and there are more participants waiting. The next question: “Do you have a green scarf for me?”, and the cycle repeats itself. This goes on for a bit. Sometimes, the participant is able to find said article, but he fails just as often. In the end, he has failed the expedition.

Wardrobe
What would you use instead of a backpack if you knew this had happened to your predecessor? Forget speed! The goal is to show as many right items as possible and not to collect them as fast as possible. A wise choice would be to bring a wardrobe on wheels. When you come across a sock, you put it in the sock drawer. Scarfs are huddled together with the gloves and hats, underpants with the t-shirts, coats go on the rack, etc. When you subsequently come to the game leader and he asks for a specific item, you know where to find it. There are two possible outcomes: you either find the article or you don’t, but in this case, you know that you do not have it. You can implore the game leader to skip to the next question. In the end, you perform much better than you predecessor.

Analogy
I tell this story as an analogy for studying. Many students apply a working method that is comparable to carrying the backpack. They collect the PowerPoints, read the texts, do the assignments and buy all the summaries. They throw, without making a distinction, all information into an imaginary backpack until it bulges out. Subsequently, they cannot see the wood for the trees. They have a lot of information, but only little knowledge.
This leads to obvious problems during the exam. They cannot find the needed information anymore: “I have read this somewhere, but I cannot remember it precisely anymore.” Or they dump all sorts of things on their answer sheet in the hope the answer is in there somewhere: “I am told that I know a lot of things, but do not give answer to the question.”

Inertia and digressive movements
Most students are, after my story, willing to put more effort into categorizing information. They are, however, soon confronted with something unpleasant: they experience inert progress with digressive movements that unsettles them. “Plodding along with a wardrobe” feels very cumbersome. It is a slow process and it costs a lot of energy to consider every item and then to sort it accordingly. “Running with the backpack”, on the other hand, feels very goal-oriented and fast. Students who experience this distinction in this way find it very difficult to keep up the wiser, but also slower working method. They often relapse.

Not the whole story
This difference in experience (slow and cumbersome versus fast and goal-oriented) is not the whole story of this relapsing. As is often the case, here, too, a misconception about learning creeps through the corridors of our minds. On this point, the scouting expedition is inadequate on an important level as analogy for studying for an exam. It seems as though the success of the person with the wardrobe is solely due to his organizational skills. He collects the same materials as the user of the backpack but organizes them more shrewdly. Users of the backpack may be tempted to justify their working method by saying: “Okay, it might not be as smart, but I collect the same items in my own way. I even collect many more, because I am faster. I only have to make sure to find them.” This interpretation is understandable, but wrong.

Organize
To arrive at this conclusion, people rely on the meaning of “organize” as ordering and sorting. This is a possible meaning of the word, but, according to me, not the right one to refer to learning. Organizing can also mean to establish or create. Think, for instance, of organizing a party, event or concert. These happenings do not exist as a collection of part-happenings that have to be organized together. They come into existence through the organization. I am of opinion that this meaning of “organizing” is more suitable to refer to knowledge acquisition.

Almost
From the perspective of the first meaning of organizing, students can be tempted to view “I have read this somewhere” as almost knowing it, because they have recognized a fragment of information. This does not mean much. It is comparable to almost winning the lottery if your ticket deviates one number from the winning combination. It is regrettable, but you have lost completely. In the same way, students might think that a list of all kinds of facts, which might have the right answer in there somewhere, is quite the achievement. But this is the same as shooting a widespread shotgun at a target. Indeed, that one round that hits the target did come from your gun, but in the haze of a hundred rounds that were shot, that, too, is insignificant. It shows very little skill.

Create
The fragments themselves are irrelevant; their organization creates knowledge. I say this often to students: “attending classes, taking and working out notes, asking questions, reading literature and summarizing texts, are no preparations for learning, they ARE the learning.” One could possibly set these activities up in a more efficient way but skipping them has large risks. Buying a summary instead of making one oneself, might seem smart, but it impedes the learning process at the root.

Broadening the analogy
The story of the scouting expedition needs to be broadened. Participants should consider the building of the wardrobe as part of the game. The participant is not collecting predetermined items (pieces of clothing) with the help of an organizing system (wardrobe) as a mere tool. Without the wardrobe, the pieces of clothing are not only unorganized, they are meaningless! They are only random fabrics.
You can give deeper layers of meaning to the expedition. Sometimes, one is tested on general knowledge (do you have a red sock?), but especially in university education, the questions are often comprehensive (what type of pants do you wear at the pool?), or questions of application (how do you knot a tie?), insight (what goes well with a bright blue shirt?), and also creative vision (assemble a sporty and daring outfit for a night out on a sultry summer evening). The simplistic ordering of fabrics is hopelessly inadequate when one must achieve such ends.

Mind maps, overviews and inquiry-response models
For students, overviews, mind maps and inquiry-response models are examples of “wardrobes”. These techniques bring parts of information together meaningfully. That is what it is about. The whole is more than the sum of its parts. Knowledge and understanding is created in the whole. It is certainly not easy to create a qualitatively high-standing overview or mind map. It takes time and energy, but again: making a mind map or overview is no preparation to the learning, but part of learning itself. When the overview is done, you have learned.
In the case of inquiry-response models, the same is true. My hero Socrates already claimed millennia ago that a good question is more important than the right answer. The question determines the context and creates the connections that render the answer meaningful. Even the right answer does not have meaning in itself.

True Scientists

First published in Dutch om the 18th of September 2013

Convictions as inferior
Yes, but that is what you think. That’s just your opinion”. This response came from an audience of parents and teachers after I had unexpectedly made statements about their own learning problems rather than about those of their children and students. The rest of the audience nervously awaited how I would deflect this assault. The only thing I said was, “yes, indeed”. This was no surrender due to some sort of exposure. My concern was precisely this. We think that by labelling statements as individual convictions, we are getting in some good shots. The statements cannot have any overarching value, because everyone has their own convictions and you cannot argue about taste. I claim that convictions are actually the most important thing we should argue about.

True scientists
We believe that facts are more important and more powerful than convictions because they have been objectively and empirically determined. In the world of science, this is absolutely true. An empirical method is essential and has given us, as method for the acquisition of knowledge, an awful lot. Education is understandably grounded on the same vantage point. Empirically obtained insights after all cover the lion’s share of the subjects that are being taught. From this perspective, the student is conveniently cast as an empiricist. He or she takes the class experience as a starting point and continues through Kolb’s further stages like a true scientist in order to arrive at knowledge.

No true scientists
I have already admitted elsewhere that I embrace Kolb’s cycle, but it is a misconception to think that we only work with facts in our actions and interactions that are directly derived from faithful observations or from scientific findings of others. We think that we are true empiricists, but this is not the case. Our biased conceptions and feelings play a large role in how we advance through Kolb’s cycle. We simply cannot abstract ourselves from this (for countless substantiations of this, see Daniel Kahneman’s book Thinking, Fast and Slow).

The influence of convictions
If tomorrow’s newspapers state that we were all wrong and that the sun does go around the earth, 99,99% of the world’s population would shrug and think, “as long as it’s there in the morning”. We are effortlessly prepared to swap one “fact” for another. Not because in this way we open ourselves to true knowledge, but because, in everyday life, facts are of less importance than we might think. Things change when our conceptions are being compromised. Discussions about the existence of God are not at all about facts. The proving or disproving of His existence would be as uneventful to our factual perception as when it would turn out that the sun does go around the earth. What makes the discussion so much fiercer is that it touches on the conceptions that we have of our world.

Convictions are everywhere
Not only the biggest conceptions on “God’s level” are relevant. Our interpretations are much more extensive and subtler than we think. They appear in all that we consider many/few, hard/easy, good/bad, comprehensible/incomprehensible, frustration/pliancy, creepy/nice, but also fine/rough, heavy/light, sharp/blunt, hard/soft, warm/cold, complex/simple and so on. These are all conceptions rather than facts.

Hardly exchangeable
We want to make the world comprehensible and meaningful and in order to do so we use our interpretations which fall outside empiricism. To us, facts are basically interchangeable unless they tally with the conceptions that we have of life around us. However, we keep these conceptions close to heart because they determine our grip on reality (see my essay I think therefore I am… faulty).

In other words, we experience no difficulty with accepting new facts, but neither do we have trouble discarding them when they clash with conceptions that we embrace. A lazy student who thinks that it will work out fine with his or her study would not necessarily be impressed by an enumeration of the credits that he or she has failed to attain. As long as the student’s conception remains intact, the facts will not find their entrance and the behaviour will not change. Conceptions can limit us to come to new insights.

Careless driving
This is not only the case for students! I stress this issue to point out that we are all like this. During my lectures, I often ask the audience for their associations with DRIVING A CAR. I am partly given facts such as, “50 kilometers an hour in urban areas”, and “traffic on your right has right of way”. Some refer to actions such as “steering, accelerating, and switching gears”. There are also those who exclaim their conceptions such as “Freedom! Grazing the pavement!” or “an expensive but necessary evil”.

To the people who like to drive dangerously I propose the following. Evidence shows that people with such conceptions have more car accidents than other traffickers. I present all sorts of statistics on the number of incidents, hospitalizations, and casualties a year. I subsequently ask whether they plan on driving more carefully from now on. The answer is always no. Why not? The most prevalent response is, “that does not apply to me”.

You do not influence learning behaviour with facts
the same perseverance is seen in people with negative conceptions. For example, this is the case with students who say they are bad in statistics, that a schedule does not work for them, or that a fail would be hell on earth. The faulty learning behaviour that stems from this is not easily altered with facts, even though this is often what trainings, courses, and coaching are tapping into. Factual knowledge and skills are often centralized; the steps of a schedule, the purpose of a regression analysis, the possibility of doing a resit. Conceptions are often disregarded. The student is treated as an objective scientist even though he or she isn’t.

Successful
This essay is not a plea to show how irrational we are. On the contrary, our conceptions are structured in the same way as all knowledge constructs in our head. This process is solidly and evolutionary tested. It is just not as neutral, objective, and empirical as one would wish to believe. We have proven to be exceptionally successful with it. People who like to drive dangerously in their car have passed their driving exam and have spent many pleasant kilometers on the road. Why would they change?

Less successful
Counselling is aimed at people who are less successful. In the counselling of these people we must realize that their less successful conceptions are, on the outset, just as robust as those of successful people, because their conceptions are structured in the same way. Just like their successful fellow men, they think their conceptions are not at stake. Only the method is insufficient or the result unsatisfactory.
For this reason, it is very useful to track down what kinds of conceptions students and clients have about the subject at hand. These strongly influence their learnability. I momentarily counsel a student who is very intelligent, but also works very chaotically. He sporadically delivers brilliant performances that immensely impressed his tutors. He is now working on his thesis, for eighteen months without any sign of progress. Working chaotically apparently has its setbacks.

Not wrong!
The student is convinced that his creativity will come to its own in this way and has a lot of difficulty (fear even) with working systematically and with incorporating self-management strategies. His conceptions draw my attention. These explain his behaviour and resistance. A faulty working method is never the problem; The conceptions that maintain this working method are the problem. I try to expose the conceptions at hand and challenge the student to defy them. Facts can help me along the way, though. After eighteen months he still does not have an accepted research proposal. His working method (aimed at spontaneous epiphanies at any random moment of the day) has factually not brought him very far. I think this is an important connection in which I am careful not to express a value judgment. His conceptions are not wrong! They just do not provide him with the desired result. In this way, I try to incorporate his conceptions in his learning cycle rather than avoiding them as an unspeakable given.

Desired results
So now let’s return to the lecture that gave rise to this essay. The person in the audience who reproached me for having personal conceptions is completely right. They are my conceptions. I put them on the table and am willing to question them, because they are what a discussion ought to be about. I am prepared to alter them if necessary. Without that readiness, a discussion is reduced to a debate in which viewpoints are defended and exceptionally little result is produced.

I am a lot less inclined to shift my ideas if someone says that my conceptions are wrong, but if one is able to show me that I thereby cannot realize my desired results (counselling students to positive effects), my readiness strongly increases. This is the type of scientist we ought to be.

Crossroads

First published in Dutch on the 6th of August 2013

Self-management
In my counselling, I focus for the largest part on strengthening the self-management of the students. The reason for this is simple. Every improvement that the student desires will have to be a result of a learning procress. I have indicated more often that I consider David Kolb’s cycle of learning an apt model for this process (a cycle of Experience, Reflection, Abstraction, Action). Three of those four steps (reflect, abstract and act) demand an orderliness of thought and behaviour. A weak self-management undermines this. Impulsiveness, chaos and ad hoc actions may be fun, but they are also exceptionally bad in facilitating stable improvements.

Time writing
To improve self-management, the current self-management needs to be exposed. I arrive at this by making the individual write time. In this assignment the person has to note everything he or she does, from early in the morning till late at night, for at least a week. This visualizes which activities are factually undertaken, safeguarded from desires, fears and conceptions. Some students think they do “nothing”, while others feel they do not have any time left. Often, such experiences are wrong. One student may do “nothing” on self-study but is active in many other study-related areas. Another student, who experiences no leeway in his or her day, might have some useable hours after dinner. In other words, time writing is an exercise in creating an overview.

Crossroads 1
Overview can quickly generate benefit. The student sees that the “doing nothing” is not as bad as its seems or he or she sees that there is plenty of time and room that is left unused. It becomes more irksome when I emphasize the intersections. These are moments where unforeseen things intersect with one’s own plans. Typical intersections with students are: an unexpected request (from the employer, fraternity, partner, etc.), the teacher is unattainable, the assignment proves to take longer than expected or turns out to be unclear, the information appears to be incomprehensible, the fellow student is neglectful, one suddenly becomes ill, and so forth.

I call such moments intersections because the surprises force one to make a sudden decision that can lead to different paths. “What will I do now? Which way do I go?” are questions that are asked and need to be answered. This is irksome because in these situations the students often do not experience an intersection. They feel they are at the mercy of the circumstances that determine their behaviour. They seem to experience a sort of highway without exits or turns, without a real choice. “If I do not understand the assignment, I cannot go on, right?”. This student actually has many options. He or she can ask for help from a fellow student, reread his or her notes, work on under an assumption, skip the part, and so forth.

Litmus test
What is interesting in these intersections is that they expose what the student has a propensity for. From the unexpected, so to speak, emerge one’s true colours. I often tell my students that their capacity for self-management is not visible if everything goes smoothly; a nice spring day in May with a soft breeze in one’s back. Their true skills in self-management becomes visible if it rains and hails unexpectantly, if they have to go up the hill with strong gusts of wind and a flat tyre. How someone deals with his or her intersections, thus, is a litmus test for real self-management.

Locus of control
Engaging in intersections is largely dependent on how the individual interprets them. To what does the person ascribe the situation? Ascribing to factors outside oneself is called an external locus of control. Students with this locus ascribe successes of failures to (bad) luck, public transport, the teacher, the internet, etc. This is opposite to an internal locus of control, where the person ascribes the effects to his or her own effort, perseverance, creativity, and something in that same vein. In my counselling conversations, I am very interested in how the student reacts to surprises in his or her life. To what does the student incline in the ascription of causes?

Balance
Strong self-management profits from a balanced locus of control where internal and external factors are ascribed in a realistic and manageable way. I focus a large part of my counselling on the improvement of this balance. A well-known saying that I often use is: “Accept what you can’t change, change what you can’t accept, and be smart enough to know the difference”.

Choices
The central vantage point with every form of counselling is always that we cannot choose our circumstances, but we can choose how we deal with those circumstances. The “how” is essential and it is precisely on these intersections that we have a choice. You can say “no” to your boss or fraternity. You can ask for help from fellow students. You can go to the room of your teacher in the hope to get hold of him or her, etc.

A depressed student
I have counselled a student who wanted to pick up his study after a long interruption of therapy, but who still suffered from severe dejection. Quite soon in the sessions he came to a session saying that the past week had been disastrous due to depression. I showed my sympathies and asked why he had not followed through on his schedule. His answer: “I just told you. I was very depressed”. My response: “I understand, but why did you not follow through on you schedule?”. His doubtful reaction: “Because I was depressed!”. I persisted: “but why falter on your schedule?” I interrupted the conversation before making him feel that I was ridiculing him and explained why I asked this question: you cannot choose your depression, but you can choose your reaction. It is possible to be depressed and still study. Perhaps you cannot give a 100%, but perhaps 80%, 60% or 40. Even 25% is decidedly more than 0%. In other words, you do have a choice!

Think, do, and feel
These are, in my eyes, crucial counselling moments. Of course, it is easier said than done, but my perspective is undeniably true. There is no physical or material impediment present that makes it all impossible. The student can factually think and do other things in given situations. What makes it all so complicated is that he wants to feel differently as quickly as possible. I view this as a circumstance that we cannot determine. We are as much subjected to feelings of dejection, a shortage of motivation, stress and fear as we are to the unreliable public transport, erratic teachers, and vulnerable computer systems. It is a given, and now we must proceed.

Intersections 2
When a student is dissatisfied with his or her situation, the student needs to be pointed to the turns he or she has taken on different intersections. The student has taken several decisions that have led him or her to come to that place. If the student resists formulating alternative actions (alternative turns on intersections) and says that “this is just how I feel”, then it must be made clear to the student that this is not an argument. This is the case for the remarks: it is a lot, difficult, vague, no fun, and so forth. All these remarks include a component of feeling that the student is unable to control. A justified reaction is, “All right, it is hard, but what are you going to do?”. There are always several turns on an intersection. If one direction does not lead to the desired destination, one simply has to turn back and take another turn, until the unacceptable has changed and the unchangeable accepted.

 

Disabilities and Aiding Devices

First published in Dutch on the 3rd of March 2013

What is the essence of knowledge acquisition?

I was preoccupied with this question as I separately counselled two students. One student, Raymond, was recovering from a serious psychosis and the other, Iris, tried to get a grip on an anxiety disorder for which she had been treated and was still administered medicine for. Both students wanted to get their studies back on track, but complained about bad concentration, forgetfulness, confusion and a shortage of energy. They felt they were not able to think and learn anymore in the way they were used to.

Filling your head

Down the road, it became clear to me that both students interpreted their problems in knowledge acquisition very physically and quantitively: “I cannot get the information in my head anymore”, “I cannot remember as much anymore”. These remarks are comparable to not being able to read the tiny letters at the optician or being unable to sense certain decibel during a hearing test. First they were able to do something and now they cannot do it anymore.

Disability

Raymond and Iris were looking for “aiding devices” from me that are similar to glasses. At the same time they were ambivalent towards this. They resisted such aids in the same way that we resist purchasing reading glasses or a hearing aid. That would namely be a sign of old age and decline. For Raymond and Iris accepting aiding devices meant an acknowledgement of a disability. They viewed the specific techniques that can be put into use to improve learning as a sort of prosthetic. In their eyes these are things a healthy or intelligent person does not need. It became clear to me that I had to tease out and highlight different misconceptions to enable an effective counselling.

No filing cabinet

The first misconception is the idea that learning is identical to filling your head with information. It is understandable that students think this. One is offered a lot of static information in books, articles, PowerPoints, lectures, etc. Many of us read the material, summarize it and subsequently try to cram it in our heads. For Raymond and Iris this was also the prevailing method and it is not odd that they had become less good in this due to their problems. But the essence of knowledge is very different from what we generally think. Learning ability cannot be compared to sense of sight and hearing ability. All experts have come to agree that our memory is not a filing cabinet. We neither “fill” the drawers nor “consult” the files. As a consequence the complete “volume” of the cabinet cannot become smaller and information is not necessarily lost if a “file” becomes damaged. The analogy is much too static in comparison to reality.

An interplay

Our way of functioning is a continuous interaction, or interplay with the environment. We are always situated in a context where we use available information (from the environment and from our memory) to achieve specific goals. We continually try to solve problems and answer questions. These vary from small trivial problems (I am bothered by the itch on my nose and what can I do to stop it?) to very large issues (how can I make sure this project will become a success?). Which information is relevant, is determined by the issue that we want to solve.

Learning capacity

For students in education this is no different. The issues within a course, for example, are: what is this about, how is this connected to the previous, what connects this to that, and how can I use it? The interplay consists of the relation of these students with the books, the lectures, the teacher, the articles, the seminars, the assignments, the fellow students, and (not unimportant) with oneself. The way of functioning within this interplay is the real learning capacity that our brains are for, not the capacity to process as much data as possible.

Information is no knowledge

A second misconception, as an extension of the first one, is the idea that information (or data) is equal to knowledge. They are fundamentally different. Information is static and immutable while knowledge is dynamic, and constantly dependent of goals and context. Socrates claimed that knowledge is empty if it does not improve our moral behaviour. I tend to agree to a large degree, though I would substitute moral behaviour with performance-oriented behaviour. Knowledge, thus, is functional by definition. The terrorist attacks of 9/11 is a historical fact, but this fact is no knowledge. The situation in which and the purposes for which this historical given is used determines the knowledge of which it is part. Presumably, this information is differently taught on a North American school than on a Northern European or Middle Eastern school. But even within the Netherlands this information will be dealt with differently in American studies than in Political science.

Organise

Knowledge, then, is shaped within the interplay of goals, available knowledge and context. This means that organisational skills are essential to the acquisition of knowledge. This is exactly what Raymond and Iris neglected supposing that only sheer brainpower is necessary for learning. Their mental problems were strengthened by a physical confusion that made them make ad hoc decisions and meant they often just “pottered about”. In complete chaos, one cannot gain knowledge and therefore cannot learn.

This is why I guided them into organising the interplay. The aiding devices I implemented were no protheses but strategies that form an integral part of knowledge acquisition. They had to set goals, make a planning (for time as well as task), and engage in functional contact with fellow students and teachers. The information that they got from books were only a part of the whole and had to serve the formulated goals rather than being a goal in and of itself.

Grip

My counselling sessions with both students have ended. Their way of functioning has improved in several areas. The confusion has been lessened and their concentration has increased. Their grip on the material is much better. Certainly, it is still hard and it costs them a lot of energy, but they are receiving passing grades that seemed impossible only a short while ago. And a result that, in my eyes, is even more important is: they feel a lot less disabled.

A Prenuptial agreement

This text was first published in Dutch on the 20th of August 2012

External versus Internal

Two visions on learning are in circulation in education. This would not have been such a problem were it not the case that both visions contradict each other and that neither one of them can solve all the problems we encounter in practice. The well-known behaviourist B.F. Skinner is seen as the progenitor of the vision that the external environment is the determining factor in the learning process. Learning would be established almost exclusively through stimuli from the environment that are interpreted either as rewards or punishment. Our need to receive rewards and avoid punishment push the development forward. On the other end of the spectrum is the view of Carl Rogers. He was convinced that the individual himself is the driving force in his development. Individual wishes and desires are the determining factor and the environment only plays a facilitating (or obstructing) role. For Skinnerians the learning environment (read: teacher + study) reigns, while followers of Rogers believe that the students themselves eventually determine what they learn.

Restrictions in practice

Both visions come across problems in practice. The philosophy of Skinner manifests itself in rigorously fleshed out educational programs in which the student is allowed restricted space to think for itself and is confronted with a lot of obligations. But completely determined and forceful programs can lead to servility, limited self-reliance, deficient motivation, and a grade obsession in students. Teachers often complain about this. The Dutch Studiehuis in secondary schools and competence oriented education in universities of applied sciences rely more on the vision of Rogers. This method, however, struggles with the educational level. It turns out to be quite difficult to keep the level of the student up, and the “rigid” method is applied increasingly rigorously to resist the downward trend.

What do we do?

As is often the case, the truth (and the wisdom) lies in the middle. Both Skinner and Rogers were right. Nobody can deny the fact that the external (learning) environment is regulatory to a certain degree in that it only accepts a limited bandwidth of behaviours per situation. At the same time, it is also true that we have a certain degree of agency in what we want to do and learn. In my book on study problems (2009), I attempt to conjoin both visions with the remark that “the external environment and the internal drives come together in the memory constructs we continually create and recreate throughout our lives.” Three years of practical experience and a whole series of essays later and it is still a challenge to truly understand this “coming together”. It is important because this is where both visions meet.

Project delineation and Goal-orientedness

The (external) learning environment manifests itself within us in a project definition. This is one of the seven skills I use to concretise effective learning. It is the answer to the question: what does the learning environment want from me? With every task, test, assignment, project, or supervision programme the teacher, supervisor, and/or study wants the student to do and realise certain things on specific terms. The better the student understands (delineates) the project, the better he will be able to attain the requirable knowledge. The internal drives manifest themselves in the second skill: goal-orientedness. Attention, interest, and concentration are fundamental attitudes in the learning process (see my essay The Zombie and the centaur). If these are lacking, a sort of zombie attitude arises that ought to be undesirable for all those involved, because a zombie is unable to learn as he is unable to experience anything. In order to experience complex things, one has to have an extensive orientation that keep the attitudes in question activated. One has to want something that goes beyond avoiding punishment or other inconveniences. The student, therefore, has to formulate his own goals within the project. The necessity of the attitudes simultaneously brings agency along. Due to the fact that we experience something continuously, one can draw the conclusion that we also continuously want things. A student who thinks he can disassociate himself from this with the remark: “I wanted to study but before I knew it, I had been whatsapping for three hours,” is mistaken: he wanted to whatsapp for three hours!

Coming together is harder than it seems

One could draw the meagrely noticeable conclusion that we are dealing with the same old song: the teacher/supervisor/study has to communicate clearly (for the student to understand the project) and the student needs to take his responsibility. This is true, but also not the whole story. The “meeting place” for teachers and students is often understood too simplistically as a place where teachers think they can offer neutral and objective information, while most students see themselves as neutral recipients of that same information. This is an illusion. Especially because Skinner and Rogers are both right, we can ascertain that objective and neutral “sending” and “receiving” does not exist. The coming together is entirely shaped by the agents themselves. This means that not only the student has to have an adequate interpretation of the project (what the teacher wants) and has to formulate his personal goals within it, it also has to happen the other way around! The teacher/supervisor also has to have an adequate interpretation of his project (what the student wants) and has to adapt to that. The attitudes of the student also have a forceful character to a certain degree for the teacher. Erik von Glazersfeld (1995) said the following: “The teacher must listen to the student, interpret what the student does and says, and try to build a model of the student’s conceptual structures. Without it, any attempt to change the student’s conceptual structures can be no more than a hit or miss affair.”

Conceptual Structures

I would like to add to this quotation that the teacher also has to communicate his own conceptual structures. The teacher/supervisor cannot escape this. Contrary to information, knowledge is not neutral and objective. Even the simplest skill that we want to teach a student has an intentionality in its definition and is therefore partly subjective and normative. Providing feedback implies, for instance, that the receiver can do something with it that is beneficial to his functioning (see my essay Chaos in the order). The teacher/supervisor always fills in (either knowingly or unknowingly) this intentionality and would do well in making this explicit. The place of coming together between teacher/supervisor and student is shaped by both their conceptual structures that are constituted by their project definition and goal-orientedness, respectively.

Thesis problems

I see many learning and supervising problems rise from incompatible project definitions and opposing goal-orientedness. I can describe this most clearly with regard to thesis supervision, because this period is an explication of the learning process in all its diversity. What I often see with students who struggle with their thesis is that very little attention has been given to the respective points of view and expectations of the supervisor and student about the thesis (both the process as the content). The period in which the thesis is written is the meeting place where both the project definition and the goal-orientedness of both parties ought to be clarified. Just like all other knowledge, the thesis is neither objective nor neutral. There might be several objective criteria the thesis has to meet, but aside from those both parties have remarkably much elbow room. The teacher as well as the student give their own personal meaning to it (either knowingly or unknowingly).

Mutual responsibilities

The supervisor has a vision on the thesis process with ideas about the self-reliance the student ought to have, which questions are to be answered, in which way and to what degree the student has to expand on his subject, etc. This vision is normative, otherwise the supervisor would not be able to supervise and grade the thesis. The supervisor benefits from sharing his vision with the student and of being open towards possible adjustments to the views and (legitimate) wishes of the student. This is only the case, however, if the supervisor truly sees the supervision of the student as his own project. At the same time, the student has to have a vision on his thesis that goes beyond, “I do everything my supervisor tells me to do so that I am finished as quickly as possible”, or the other extreme, “I don’t want to make any concessions on my ideas”. In both cases, the student would probably end up in trouble because time and again he neither takes his responsibility nor does he really look for contact with its supervisor.

Prenuptial agreement

The relationship between a student and teacher/supervisor is fine mashed and nuanced. Preferably, there is a passionate relationship in which both meet each other in shared views and wishes. Reality, sadly, is often less romantic, but a marriage of conveniences can also be enormously effective. I put the lower limit at a prenuptial agreement because there, at least, the togetherness of the learning process can be emphasised. Eventually, the student and the “learning environment” have to do it together.

I think therefore I am… flawed

First published in Dutch 14th of March 2012

Difficult people

Sometimes students become desperate because of their study problems. They feel powerless and are at the end of their rope. “It is too much and too hard”, “I just can’t do it”, “It goes wrong every time”, “I’ll never finish”, “I can’t do anything”, “I have to pass this time, otherwise I am doomed”. An outsider could, in reading these sentences, react compassionately, but also a bit supercilious. “These people are making it very hard on themselves”, would be an understandable judgment. This is true. The thoughts are quite extreme and would sooner rouse feelings of misery rather than offer salvation and solutions.

Not the only ones

The outsiders who have their judgments ready must not be too quick in thinking they are much different. They might be able to relativize the situations that these students find unbearable but they also have their own crude idiosyncrasies. Someone who completely sympathises with the remarks above would after all conclude about the outsiders; “Such arrogance! They apply one measure to everyone”. This, too, is true.

Rule rather than exception

Once in a while, everyone is caught having unnuanced thoughts and drawing hasty conclusions. An attentive person would ascertain that this is a rule rather than an exception, especially when the emotions run high. Unsubtlety is not only “not uncommon”, it is a fundamental characteristic of our way of thinking. That is why these students struggle so much with themselves when they are confronted with serious problems they cannot find their way out of.

A hold on the surroundings

Every representative of a species tries to get a hold of their surroundings in order to secure the survival of its kind. Us humans are no different, but due to the increase of our mental capacities, maintaining our grip became increasingly complex. Because our ancestors could think increasingly better, they created more and more opportunities to get hold of things, which, in turn, made them even better at thinking, causing them to create even more opportunities and so on. It became a self-reinforcing system that brought about a gigantic explosion of intellectual capacities. The way of thinking that developed has yielded us an awful lot, but is simultaneously inherently problematic.

Searching for regularities

Our thinking is directed towards knowledge acquisition in the shape of unchangeable facts, clear processes, and unambiguous regularities. Only then do we experience a hold on the surroundings. Exceptions, irregularities, and variables are less interesting because they can cause doubt and indecisiveness. In the past, this was life-threatening but nowadays it can still be incredibly annoying because it makes us feel as though we are losing our hold on the surroundings.

Our quest for knowledge has a certain eagerness. The degree of grip is determined by our successes. These successes are subject to time pressure and competition. In the past, it was a conflict against nature and other animal species. Nowadays, it is primarily aimed at fellow humans. The learning process (that shapes our thinking) is thus not an objective, but a subjective process and has logically developed a number of characteristics with which we can quickly find (alleged) types of knowledge.

Properties of our thinking

Perhaps the most important property of our thinking is our natural tendency to form a hypothesis and then search for its confirmation (this is called the confirmation bias). We are not calm and carefully deliberating beings that, after collecting all the facts, come to a decent and substantiated conclusion. No, we quickly judge, look for the proof that agrees with it and act accordingly. Evolutionary speaking, this is understandable but it also has its disadvantages.

A student who desperately claims that “it is too much and too hard”, has probably already formulated his opinion about the material before he is even aware of it. The “fact” is continuously confirmed as soon as he does not understand a sentence or his thoughts wander off and he finds himself looking startled at the clock. But passages that he does understand the first time, and periods in which he is concentrated, are left unnoticed because they do not confirm his hypothesis.

Thinking hazards

Mainly noticing facts that confirm our hypothesis is called selective attention. This is the reason why most car drivers consider themselves above average chauffeurs and are we firmly convinced that we are always in the slow lane in the supermarket. We primarily see the evidence for that. The facts that contradict our thesis, we either do not see or forget them quickly. This does not only apply to the frustrated and arrogant people among us, we all do it. It is a characteristic of our thinking because we want to formulate a regularity as quickly as possible.

Another characteristic of our eager search is the tendency to simplify and to exaggerate. The thought, “It is too much and too hard”, for example, is a simplification because it conveniently assumes an indivisible “it”, while the material of course consists of different components. Furthermore, it is also an exaggeration by saying it is too much and too hard. In reality, there are several degrees of difficulty and probably only a small part of the material is actually too difficult for the student to fathom independently. This characteristic also applies to all of us. If I say to you “I am a bit in love with you”, then you will hardly register the word “bit”. O dear! He is in love with me! You will barely experience the gradation. This applies to most of the things we experience.

Finally, we generalize too quickly. After all, something only becomes a rule when it is always the case, never succeeds, or applies to everyone. The reasoning has a black-and-white, everything-or-nothing character. “It is too much”, has the same rigidity as “The earth is round”. It seems water-tight, while the student actually says: “I think it is too much”. The consequences are necessarily catastrophic since “too much” presumes an inescapability. The student can only end in the gutter.

An abhorrence

For supporters of philosophy of knowledge, the foregoing phenomenon is an abhorrence. These are considered fallacies, and scientifically and philosophically, they indeed are. But on the level of human functioning it is different. I know students who employ the scientific research method religiously for themselves and who, in effect, have no life left. Now, that is an abhorrence. They are constantly confused, indecisive en consequently frustrated. I also mentioned this in my essay on perfectionism (see Perfectionists and other road abusers). I also see students who struggle with choices because they want to make the best one. But their objective scientific method won’t help them there.

So?

The degrees of the foregoing characteristics differ per individual as well as the capacity to become aware of them and to think (more) attentively. In every composition, there are positive and negative sides. But the limitation of our thinking is a fact. We draw quick conclusions on the basis of simplifications, generalisations, and selective attention. If we want to demonstrate a (quick) conclusion anyway, it is wise to choose a positive and constructive thesis. Not because this is scientifically or philosophically “more correct”, but because this one is usually more practical. “The glass is half full” or “the glass is half empty” are both equally correct, but the first one is generally more pleasant for our way of thinking.

Homo Praxis (part 2)

First published in Dutch on the 2nd of May 2011

Learning processes consist of actions that are inextricably bound to the end goal; they determine the end goal’s identity. In my previous essay I put it as follows; “the order and prioritisation of certain activities (…) have a particular meaning within the trajectory and influence the impact of the whole learning experience.” I find this very important; so much so, that I have decided to elaborate on it further in a second essay.

No attention for actions

Practical thinking and acting receives relatively little attention in education. Students often seem to be encouraged to spend as much time as possible in the head, building a passive attitude. They are expected to mainly address their mental capabilities through listening during class sessions and reading the corresponding literature.

Students often do take practical classes in secondary school when they attend chemistry classes, biology classes or physics classes, but those classes do not build the practical skills I am concerned with. The type of skills I am referring to are based on actions that are necessary to make mental processing possible. Do students learn techniques with which to study their literature efficiently and effectively? Do they receive training in the best techniques to summarise texts or in strategies to write an effective essay? Do we give the proper attention to, perhaps, the most important actions of all; the actions which allow students to solve their own (learning) problems? I venture to doubt.

My view is based on the observation that the majority of students I meet believe that learning is supposed to be the direct absorption of the material. It is presented as a kind of osmosis that is achieved through pure thinking power, contrary to the labour-intensive and practical building process it really is.

Tools for learning, such as planners, mind maps, or systems for taking notes, by definition, represent weakness. In the eyes of many students, the ones who need such tools are weaker students than those who do well without them. This conception is widespread, which leaves me to conclude that they must have picked it up somewhere along the way, undoubtedly unintended.

An evolutionary process

To be honest, I suspect that the ability to absorb information directly is deemed the better alternative to learning by using practical tools. I also suspect that this judgement finds its basis in the pervasive perspective on our evolutionary psychological development. Our early ancestors acted first and when they observed the consequences of their actions they adapted their behaviour to stimulate a more favourable outcome. They learned by trial and error. As brain capacity increased, however, they were able to act out their trial and error experiences in their heads in order to determine which actions should be the best alternative, before they put them into practice. Nowadays, we are even capable of performing thought-experiments that cannot be acted out in practice at all. This idea suggests that our species has been internalising more and more and this is thought of as a sign of growth and improvement.

Internal processes as high ambition

It is not hard to understand the evolutionary benefits of the ability to plot and plan things. For instance, an action, based on a “just do it, we will see about the result” thought, which subsequently results in death, offers little opportunity to learn from it. The ability to dream up alternative scenarios in your head first, however, provides the opportunity to avoid some such risks. Stipulating this process even further, Einstein becomes the ultimate example of the ideal result of our cognitive development. His thought-experiments ultimately changed the natural sciences fundamentally. Some of his experiments could only be tested after his death, because of technological limitations during his lifetime that we have been able to overcome in the modern era. The ability to internalise, then, is understandably regarded as the highest ambition in intelligence.

A process gone too far  

In my opinion, we are going a little overboard in our desire to only use our heads; instead, there are disagreeable aspects I often encounter in my daily practice. Students, who find themselves hopelessly stuck in regard to their studies, no longer base their ideas on practice. They fail to measure the results of their thinking (often ruminations resulting in negative feelings, self-blame or complaints) against reality. This results in stress, frustrations and insecurities that are not so much confirmed by actual consequences of their behaviour, but rather by their own fears. A complete focus on internal processes cancels out the corrective or affirmative effect of reality, because of which negative emotions may conjure up ghosts.

A learning problem is an inability to act effectively

As I mentioned before, our actions are supposed to be the basis for reflection; the same is true for individual learning processes. This forms the basis for my perspective on learning problems. If actions are fundamental to our learning processes, then actions are also fundamental to our learning problems. In this way, learning problems are also an inability to act effectively. (I am not referring to problems that have neurophysiological causes).

Not so simple

Identifying learning problems as inability to act effectively seems a welcome assessment. After all, actions can be controlled, which should make tackling learning problems a simple endeavour. Unfortunately, reality is not this simple. Recently, I organised a week of support to a great number of students who were stuck writing their dissertations. My classes followed the above principle. First, I explained how the writing process can be divided up in concrete actions. The students loved how comprehensive the steps were. Next, I asked them to determine at which stage in the process they were and what should be their next action. At this point the students became less elated. Some of them felt uncomfortable and resisted commitment, “I am working on multiple steps simultaneously.” As soon as I asked the students to create a plan to work through the chosen step, I met with even more resistance, “I cannot plan things;” “I just do not know what tomorrow will bring;” “I also have my job to go to and my shifts are never clear-cut;” etc.

Cause of resistance

This resistance has multiple causes, but I am convinced that one of them is based on having too much appreciation for (action-less) thought processes. Students seem to resist practicality. Do students perhaps perceive practicality as detrimental to their level of thinking? Is it like “painting by numbers” to them? One can paint beautiful paintings using this system, but it is not done for an aspiring artist to use it. Painting by numbers does not turn one into an artist; after all, art has to come from the inside, with no aids telling the artist what to do or how to do it.

When inspiration becomes elusive, students tend to try and squeeze some out through pure willpower and that is the exact moment when they get stuck. After all, whenever one sticks to what one has always done, the result will always be the same. In this case, there will be no results at all. Pure brainpower will not change this.

Praxis above all else

Each creative process depends on the actions that need to be carried out. Actions are inextricably bound to creating. They provide a (mid-term) review of the effects in reality and the feedback that results from this, as I mentioned before, will have a corrective or affirmative effects. They are the basis of new building blocks. Without actions there will be no progress and without progress there is no creation. There is no way of achieving goals without using the tools that will get you there.

In my view, Einstein’s miracles also have to be interpreted in this way. His thinking power was certainly impressive, but he also based his ideas on practice. For instance, the relativity of speed was a concept that snuck into his mind when he was in a train and experienced the confusing effect of another train passing in the same direction with a different velocity. This was the basis of further thought. I perceive his elaborations as mental actions, because each time his thoughts were the basis for new ideas which he subsequently evaluated. Through this method he was able to build something with his thoughts that proved to be correct. This is completely different from ineffective ruminations and stressing which is what most of us do when we get stuck; mental dramatics turn our molehills into maintains.

Our ideal seems to be the stoic figure of Rodin’s The Thinker, but it remains a hopeless ambition that causes all the necessary frustration. Actions, whether physically or mentally, are central to our thinking power. We are Homo Praxis, as much in our limbs as in our heads.

Homo Praxis

First published in Dutch on the 13th of March 2011

Costs and Benefits
I often encounter students who seem to think exclusively in terms of costs and benefits or means and goals. Due to this way of thinking some of them refuse to attend any voluntary seminars they deem unnecessary, without the slightest hint of embarrassment. In their minds certain means/costs do not add anything to their goals/benefits (passing the exam). Whenever these students do attend class, they want to know (again, without embarrassment) exactly what information presented in class will be part of the upcoming exam. They are also in the habit of expertly trading readers and summaries. They are true masters of accumulating barely sufficient grades and demonstrate impressive rhetoric whenever their mathematical skills fail them and they need to turn a 5,4 out of 10 into a 5,6. These are students who are looking for tips and tricks to study more efficiently, plan their studies better and experience less stress. The solutions must be instantaneous and well-fitted with their busy schedule; the results must be immediately visible, otherwise they will look for something new to try.

Continue reading →

Chaos in order

First published in Dutch on the 6th of December 2010

“Self-help advice lowers self-esteem”
This was the title of an article that appeared in the Dutch newspaper NRC Handelsblad in May of 2009. American research had found that affirmations such as “I’m worth being loved”, do not increase the self-confidence of insecure people, but rather lowers it. This confirmed what I had long experienced in my own work; teaching competencies (I perceive self-confidence to be a competency) is not an easy matter.

Continue reading →

The Zombie and the Centaur

First published in Dutch on the 24th of October 2010

I hope I can keep it up.”

Disappointment
A student made the remark above to me only recently at the close of our sessions. His remark holds much hesitation about his ability to remain motivated, focused and interested. A little weary, I responded with words of unsurprising wisdom; “At the end of the day, you simply have to get on with it.”

Continue reading →