Can the School Teach Deep Learning?
A Paper based on
Deeply Affecting First-Year Student’s Thinking:
Deep Approaches to Learning and Three Dimensions of
Cognitive Development
By
Marcial I. Enginco
MA Educational Psychology
College of Education
UP Diliman
For
Grace S. Koo, PhD
Professor, EDFD 202: Cognitive Learning
SUMMARY
Deeply Affecting
First-Year Student’s Thinking: Deep Approaches to Learning and Three Dimensions
of Cognitive Development is a study conducted to assess mainly the effects and
relationship of Deep Approaches to Learning (DAL) to students’ Critical
Thinking, Need for Cognition and Positive Attitudes Toward Learning. It was published in the May-June 2014 edition
of the The Journal of Higher Education.
The researchers
sent invitations to participate to college and universities all over the United
States on which 60 responded positively, 19 institutions were then
selected. The longitudinal research
initially collected data from 4,501 incoming first year college students, with
3,081 of the total (68.5%) agreeing to a
follow up data collection.
The research aimed
to estimate the relationship of DAL on three cognitive dimensions, namely:
Critical Thinking, Need for Cognition, and Positive Attitudes Toward Learning. The results reveal that DAL has no
relationship to Critical Thinking, but with slight significance to Need for
Cognition and Positive Attitudes Toward Learning.
The study was
conducted by Thomas F. Nelson Laird, Tricia A. Seifert, Ernest T. Pascarella,
Matthew J. Mayhew and Charles F. Blaich with a grant from the Center of Inquiry
in the Liberal Arts, Wabash College.
INTRODUCTION
Deep learning,
like a young tree taking root, is lasting and has positive implications on the
growth of a person not only as a learner but as an individual making productive
decisions later in life. As the learning
burrows ever deeper into the rich soil of knowledge, it gives growth to sturdy
branches that allow the learner to become an incisive and insightful thinker,
with an inner motor to creatively and persistently seek out knowledge to use
and share freely and readily, without need for recognition – like a sprawling
canopy generously giving shade and respite to the weary just because it can.
But alas, an
analogy about how potent deep learning can be in the field of education, or in
creating clarity and crafting solutions out of personal, social or work life problems
is easier to conjure in the head than to make it work in the classroom, as the
results of this study would seem to strongly suggest.
A teacher, or even
an ordinary person with cursory concern over a student’s education, would be
justified to assume that a young student, fresh from high school, will
positively gain from being exposed for a year to something as effervescently
termed as Deep Approach to Learning, or DAL.
However, oddly and
rather unexpectedly, the research has failed to establish a link between DAL
and Critical Thinking, and had barely – and only by a flimsy thread – connected
it with Need for Cognition and Positive Attitudes Toward Learning. Intriguing further is the finding that it is
not exposure to DAL but the pre-college critical thinking level and academic
preparation of students which determine the overall critical thinking
performance of the respondents when they transition into college. Simply put, high school students will roughly
register the same score in critical thinking up until the end of their first
year in college, even if they went through a year of DAL.
Is DAL, then, merely a powerful-sounding
placebo? A myth that educators want to play over and over to assure the
educational system, to which they belong, that it is closer now more than ever
to understanding how the human mind learns? Is the school the proper venue for learning
to learn deeply, or is it merely an auxiliary to such a pursuit? I will attempt to address these questions and
expound on other related issues in this paper.
The Good, The Bad and The Questionable
As a graduate
student still finding my way through the intricacies of research, I heavily rely
on how readings, particularly journals and studies, are written and constituted
to inform my concept of what a good research paper should be, at least in
substance, flow and structure as I prefer to adapt the form to my prose.
However, too often,
I encounter researches that treat the review of related literature as an
opportunity to showcase how much work went into the paper even before the
actual research began by haphazardly citing sources left and right, front, back
and center, instead of lucidly using the same to guide and educate the reader about competing views and
reinforcing thoughts, which then will lead to insightful dissection of gaps that
underscore the importance of the study, as well as the value of its eventual findings
to the reader and his particular interests. This is why I appreciate the manner by which
the researchers of this study clearly and methodically whittled down the gaps
out of the literature woodwork, which has made it easier for me to grasp the
importance of their research and what can and cannot be realistically expected
and derived from it.
Also, I think that
the researchers should be commended for, at least on paper, broadening the
conditions from which the study of deep learning and its effect on students may
be framed by including contextualizing factors such as the respondents’
socio-economic background into the mix of variables. Though I would have appreciated it better had
they actually raised the results and discussed the findings to suggest
differences in (even similarities or no differences), say, critical thinking
between Hispanics, African-Americans, Asian-Americans and Caucasian
Americans. I mention this because I
believe that such general data may be used by future researchers as a starting
point for further understanding ethnicity, and the social contexts and
underpinnings particular to a group.
The researchers
exercised great care in the selection of participating institutions. However, the same, it seems, was not applied
to the choice of respondents as liberal arts students were more liberally
selected over other majors in the sample.
This over representation, the paper explains, is because the study’s
focus is on the impacts of liberal arts colleges and liberal arts experiences. Oddly enough, no findings specifically mentioning
the results for liberal arts students were discussed or offered in the paper. Or perhaps, the results corresponding to that
query were exclusively turned over to the Wabash College, which sponsored the
research. Whatever the case maybe, this
apparent overlook leaves questions hanging.
Was it because the researchers utilized weighting algorithms designed to
make the overall sample more similar to the population? If so, then it defeats the stated purpose of
over representation and exposes perhaps a flaw of loose ends and untied
threads.
I suppose it is
not illegal because apparently it is an accepted research strategy, but I
highly question the propriety of giving a stipend to the respondents as the
endeavor is essentially and ultimately academic in nature. Would the respondents answer less truthfully
had they not received any monetary compensation? I wonder, is the reason behind this strategy
driven by deep or shallow thinking?
Likewise, I also
feel that the respondents were not given full disclosure of the nature of the
study they were participating in, but merely a general and vague description of
it when they were informed that they were to be part of, to quote from the
paper verbatimly, “a national longitudinal study examining how a college
education affects students, with the goal of improving the undergraduate
experience.” It is like informing a
would-be participant in an experimental anti-ebola medicine that the test that
will be conducted on him aims to find out how fast his body can absorb an
unknown drug, with unknown effects – still true, but not the truth that the
subject needs to hear. I wonder if the
results of the research would change if the respondents were informed that the
study was about how DAL would affect their critical thinking, need for
cognition and positive attitudes toward learning.
ANALYSIS AND DISCUSSION
It is said that
the inner drive to search for knowledge becomes second nature to deep learners,
and that this trait holds true outside of the classroom and manifests in multi-faceted
ways in how the person goes about his daily business. For the deep learner learning itself, and the
process that goes with it, is more than enough motivation to seek out knowledge
– and sometimes, “The” only reason for doing so. On the other hand, the shallow learner
prefers rote and memory exercises, avoids complex situations and detests
unfamiliar terrains as these may lead to mistakes and wrong decisions that
he/she will deem a failure, a rather embarrassing one.
Unfortunately, in
the absence of an objective verification outside of the classroom and into the
personal lives of both kinds of learner, the proof of learning and performance
is often measured in grades; which, then, begs the questions: Did the learner
with the high grades actually learn? and
did the learner who did not get a sterling mark absorbed less? Add to this the reality that many teachers
teach for exams and we can see how unreliable most grading systems are is in
far as gauging whether students are developing into deep, lifelong learners or
shallow, memory sticks collecting data that is either conveniently deleted,
replaced, or corrupted over time.
From grade school
and up to the time I was in college, I was not a performer in the traditional
sense of schooling terminology. And if
my grades were any indication, then I was not learning all that much
either. But I was learning,
deeply.
My first encounter
with cartoons was on a neighbor’s TV set.
The young Enginco household then, with our parents’ indulgence, did not
have the benefit of technology, except for a small radio cassette player that
was not allowed to play louder than a normal conversation. What passed for entertainment were three sets
of encyclopedia which I began leafing through long before I knew what letters
sounded like. There were also all manners
of printed paper materials with visually rich pictures including big, thick
books about two wars apparently involving an entire world populated by people
with a penchant for violence and facial hair, an even bigger hardbound with
watercolor illustrations of jagged lines that formed brown, green and white
masses scattered over vast blues with tiny ships trailing dotted lines that
touched the edges of brown, thin magazine-sized books about massive triangular
edifices housing half-naked dead people with serious eyeliners, huge flying
lizards that lived in water and large fierce-looking animals that ate treetops,
but which no one alive had seen in the flesh, only in bones. I looked at all of them, over and over
again. And when I learned how to read, I
went over them, over and over again, and so with the score of Reader’s Digest
that kept coming in month after month.
But at school, I
practically read nothing. And in the
instances that I did, there was no trace of enjoyment, only a deep fear of
being singled out as lazy and unworthy of being called a student.
When I entered
college at barely sixteen, I did not strike anyone as an intelligent person. In fact, the first thing that a school
official told me when she was looking over my report card with a worried face was,
“Mag-aaral ka ng mabuti, ha.” I simply
nodded because I’ve been hearing the same thing from my former teachers every
time they wrote down on my report card the numerical value of my performance in
class. Were the grades fair? If it reflected the sum of my performance based
on test scores, assignments and projects turned in, and overall participation
in class, I say they were. But did it
take into account whether I was a deep learner or a shallow one? Apparently not. And it seems that most schools and many educators
do not care as long as their requirements for computing grades are objectively met.
But admittedly, I
came into college not much of a critical thinker, or else I would have
questioned how the way grades are computed, and how education – which should
prepare the student for the real world – is ironically largely not about the
real world. While I was naturally
curious, I went about looking for answers without the benefit of weighing first
in my head the answers and options to the questions: What can I, or others, get
out of this? Is it good for me? For others?
Will it put me in trouble? Not
even the basic question, Can I get away with it?
I believe that
critical thinking is the difference between the intelligent and the wise. It comes with age, experience and making
mistakes, and not through school-induced strategies, no matter how well-meaning
or well-defined they are. So it does not
surprise me at all that the results of the study have shown that the level of
critical thinking of first year college students will be no different from when
they were still highschool seniors. It
is not fair to have high expectations about critical thinking from people who
have not lived long enough to learn lessons from their mistakes. And we are talking here about Americans who
go into their first year in college at roughly 18 or 19. What more can you expect from Filipino
students who enter college at 16 (Until the first graduates of the K-12 come
in, that is.).
Yes, there is a
marked difference in critical thinking between freshmen and their junior and
senior counterparts. I had first account
knowledge of this when I was asked to teach literature some years ago, which
involved not only a lot of reading but plenty of analysis and discussions as
well. For reasons known only to the
respective program directors, some courses required their students to take the
subject in their first year of schooling, while others recommended it for later
years. To my consternation and utter
frustration (directed towards the program directors), I found the ideas,
articulation and capacity for lesson integration of first year students not
only severely lacking in depth and clarity, but in breadth and ambition as
well, which were thankfully miles apart from those of many juniors’ and seniors’
who have somehow reached the beginning stages of critical thinking.
I believe that
positive attitudes toward learning and need for cognition are as equally
important as critical thinking to deep learning. A student who has a positive disposition to
learning is not given to frustration and self-doubt in the face of difficult
and complex lessons. On the other hand,
one who sees education, and learning in general, as a chore and required burden
tends to be highly self-critical and averse to making mistakes that paralysis
by analysis becomes an unintended consequence when confronting complexity or
unfamiliar territory. Thus, the learner
forfeits the opportunity to deepen his knowledge or discover
opportunities. I have known many people
who were grade conscious and got good marks in college who settled for jobs
that require minimum risks such as an executive assistant (euphemism for
secretary), or employs rote such as a bank teller or bill collector, which
greatly undermine their true potential to acquire more challenging and
rewarding pursuits.
Need for cognition
is the term used to describe a person’s tendency to engage in and enjoy
thinking. People with high need for
cognition immerse themselves in ideas and knowledge, and actively participate
in discussions and other activities that deepen and broaden what they already
know. On the other hand, those with low
need for cognition are said to have the tendency to look at others, either a
trusted friend or a famous celebrity, to shape their thoughts and facilitate decisions. Sadly, at the rate Kris Aquino, Vice Ganda
and Vic Sotto are gobbling up endorsement deals then I guess it would be fair to
assume that many Filipinos have very low need for cognition. Perhaps this also explains why the likes of
the Revillas, Estradas and Lapids win elections running away, to the bank.
CONCLUSION
Are Philippine schools
designed for deep or shallow learning?
Do teachers have the capacity to plumb the depths of learning? If not, can they be trained to adapt to teach
deep learning techniques? And if they
can be trained, can their teaching output be standardized to assure deep
learning?
I believe the
answers would depend on who is responding.
DepED top brass
would say, “But of course, we can and we will employ DAL in our
classrooms. In fact, we have the modules
ready and training schedules planned.
Our implementation goal is this… “
While the teacher
would reply, “Don’t tell me that I’m doing it wrong. I’ve been teaching this subject for 20 years
already and I can recite my lessons even with eyes closed. If you want to go deep learning, then go deep
in your pocket so that we can get just compensation for teaching your children
how to learn. Ang hirap kaya.”
And then the
students would nonchalantly mutter, “It sounds scary. Do we even need that?”
Deep learning does
not happen in a vacuum. There must be an
impetus to make it happen. And in
fairness to the school and to the educational system as a whole, I don’t think
that learning deep learning starts nor ends inside a classroom. I believe that any researcher can predict
with a high degree of certainty the depth or shallowness of a student’s
learning by simply looking at what can be found inside the child’s house, or
listening at what kinds of conversation and how they are carried out inside the
home.
We had what we had
inside our small, wooden house and we, all six male siblings, grew up with a
healthy appreciation for learning.
Of course, a
teacher with great awareness at the totality of the learning process would be
very helpful in the process. But until
all teachers learn to stop saying “Mag-aral ka, mababa ang mga grades mo,” the
school can never be the bastion and champion of deep learning.