Lessons for a life of change
Guy Claxton
Published: 08 October 2004
Techniques to ensure children
learn for a lifetime are more than just another fad, writes Guy
Claxton
Schools minister David Miliband says that one of the core
functions of education for "the young Britons of the 21st
century" is "learning to learn in preparation for a lifetime of
change". And indeed primary schools have been keen to embrace
techniques that claim to help children to be more effective
learners.
Everywhere you go, children can draw a "mind map", tell you
their "learning style", and explain why they need to keep
sipping water while they are learning (because if they don't
their brain cells will dry up).
But do these hints and tips actually help to achieve
Miliband's ambitious aim? Is helping children learn better the
same thing as helping them become better (lifelong) learners?
How have approaches to improving the quality of learning
changed over the past two decades? And is it now possible to
meet Miliband's intention more powerfully and more reliably?
There have been four stages so far in the evolution of
aproaches to learning to learn. In the first generation,
"improving learning", to put it bluntly, just meant raising
standards. For these schools and teachers, learning is another
word for achievement.
A first-generation teacher creates interesting, orderly
lessons that will put her children firmly on the path to good
results. But she does not think much about what is going on at
the students' end of the teaching-and-learning process.
The second generation of approaches saw learning as a
process, as something interesting that happens between
children's ears. These teachers thought of learning as a matter
of skill or technique, and taught their children a range of
strategies that would help them understand, organise and retain
knowledge, and manage their time and tasks more effectively.
Pupils learnt how to create pretty diagrams like spindly
trees that showed how the animal kingdom was structured, and how
to use mnemonics to remember the colours of the rainbow.
Study skills, revision skills or learning skills were the
name of the game.
But being an effective learner involves more than technique -
preference and personality come into play as well. So new
third-generation approaches homed in on "learning styles", and
assumed that teachers could help children learn better by
finding out what their predominant style was, and teaching them
accordingly.
A third-generation teacher would give her children learning
styles questionnaires and use the answers to adjust her
teaching. She might put notes in her lesson plans reminding her
"not to forget the kinaesthetic learners", and to do some "brain
gym" exercises. She might also believe that physical and
emotional conditions affect learning a good deal, and that
self-esteem and emotional intelligence are crucial.
The third-generation approaches were holistic, not strongly
developmental.
Often the categories used were rather crude and
scientifically suspect. The evidence is that we are all much
more changeable as learners, both between different tasks and
contexts, and over longer periods of time, than such models
supposed.
A child who says: "I can't do all that reading, Miss, I'm a
kinaesthetic learner" has not been liberated and challenged to
grow. And a teacher who succeeds in creating a calm and safe
learning environment may not be giving her children the
"hardening off" they will surely need to thrive in less
protected environments.
More recently, a new generation of approaches has begun to
develop. They too recognise the importance of dispositions but
see them as habits to be cultivated. This means seeing the
classroom as a place where positive attitudes and tolerances are
encouraged, over time, rather than just dealt with in a one-off
lesson.
Helping children to learn how to learn in preparation for a
lifetime of change - Miliband's wish - is not just a more
efficient way to get good test results but is a result in
itself. And teachers have to start to think of themselves as
learning coaches - a role that weaves right through literacy and
numeracy and science and history.
The growing realisation is that, though this means more than
water bottles and brain gym, it is practical and achievable.
But just as two minutes of brain gym every so often will not
make you fitter, so the hints and tips and bottles of water will
not, by themselves, develop learning power. It means going
beyond flatpacks and fine words and discovering smart, low-cost,
low-risk, high-leverage things that teachers can do to shift the
learning climate by five degrees.
When that happens, children's levels of achievement and
attainment go up.
They learn more about the world they live in. Their literacy
and numeracy improve. And dozens of action research projects up
and down the country have demonstrated that they also come to
feel more confident, capable and creative in the face of the
real-world challenges they meet.
As two Cardiff 10-year-olds reflected "this will be useful to
us when we are sitting exams and can't ask the teacher", and
"they tell you how to do well and not just in school".
Guy Claxton is professor of learning sciences, Graduate
School of Education, Bristol university. Teaching Children to
Learn, Burning Issues in Education, No. 11, 2004, National
Primary Trust, www.npt.org.uknptrust@tesco.netEnquiries into
Building Resourceful, Resilient and Reflective Learners The
Cardiff Learning to Learn Project Vols. I, II and III; from
Cardiff schools senior adviser Alice Griffith, AGriffith@cardiff.gov.uk
Any thoughts? Write to
Primary@tes.co.uk
GOOD LEARNERS
* are curious, creative and critical
* they like to ask questions - they wonder "how come"
* they use their imaginations to explore possibilities - they
wonder "what if?"
* they don't take things for granted - they tend to say "yes,but..."
WHERE THE DREAM BECOMES THE REALITY
Fourth-generation teachers help children develop "learning
muscles" and "learning stamina" (terms which they might well use
as they chat to them).
They aim to create a climate where it is "cool" to try, have
a go, make mistakes, ask questions, use your imagination, and
talk about the "how" of learning. They make a point of saying "I
don't know", "That's a good question" and "How could we find
out?"
The children are seen as partners in finding out about
learning, a process that complements and supports the
curriculum.
Interest in learning is palpable in the classroom.
There may be a "wonder wall" where the children have amassed
all their own questions, and it is a reward to be the person who
picks one and leads a "wonder session".
There could be a "riskometer" on the wall where the children
stick their photos to indicate their self-selected level of risk
as they embark on an activity.
There is often a big poster about "what to do when you don't
know what to do" which the children have made, and to which they
frequently refer. They discover and add new ideas to it as they
go along. And each child may have their "explorer's log-book" in
which they reflect on their learning: what did I find hard? How
did I get over it? What did I learn about how to be a good
learner? When else could I use that strategy?
In the fourth generation, the idea of teaching children to be
lifelong learners becomes a reality.