Pedagogy (pèd-e-go´jê) literally means the art and science of
educating children and often is used as a synonym for teaching. More
accurately, pedagogy embodies teacher-focused education.
In the
pedagogic model, teachers assume responsibility for making decisions about
what will be learned, how it will be learned, and when it will be learned.
Teachers direct learning.
The
great teachers of ancient times, from Confucius to Plato, didn't pursue
such authoritarian techniques. Major differences exist between what we
know of the great teachers' styles, yet they all saw learning as a process
of active inquiry, not passive reception. Considering this, it is
surprising that teacher-focused learning later came to dominate formal
education.
One
explanation for the teacher-focused approach goes back to the Calvinists
who believed wisdom was evil. They espoused that adults direct, control,
and ultimately limit children's learning to keep them innocent.
Another theory maintains that seventh century schools, organized to
prepare young boys for the priesthood, found indoctrination an effective
approach to instill beliefs, faith, and ritual. Many centuries later,
organized schools adopted a similar approach although the outcome was
supposed to be neither innocence nor a cloistered life.
John
Dewey believed formal schooling was falling short of its potential. Dewey
emphasized learning through various activities rather than traditional
teacher-focused curriculum. He believed children learned more from guided
experience than authoritarian instruction. He ascribed to a
learner-focused education philosophy. He held that learning is life not
just preparation for life.
Adult
education, too, fell victim to teacher-centered models. In 1926, the
American Association for Adult Education began and quickly started
researching better ways to educate adults. Influenced by Dewey, Eduard C.
Lindeman wrote in The Meaning of Adult Education:
Our
academic system has grown in reverse order. Subjects and teachers
constitute the starting point, [learners] are secondary. In conventional
education the [learner] is required to adjust himself to an established
curriculum....Too much of learning consists of vicarious substitution of
someone else's experience and knowledge. Psychology teaches us that we
learn what we do....Experience is the adult learner's living textbook.
Unfortunately, only some of Dewey's and Lindeman's theories seeped into
modern classrooms for children or adults. A century after Dewey proposed
learner-focused education, most formal education still focuses on the
teacher.
As a
result, many learners leave school having lost interest in learning. Even
good-intentioned educators can squelch naturally inquisitive instincts by
controlling the learning environment. By adulthood, some people view
learning as a chore and a burden.
In an
attempt to formulate a comprehensive adult learning theory, Malcolm
Knowles, in 1973, published the book The Adult Learner: A Neglected
Species. Building on the earlier work of Lindeman, Knowles asserted that
adults require certain conditions to learn. He borrowed the term
andragogy (and-rè-go´jê) to define and
explain the conditions.
Andragogy, initially defined as "the art and
science of helping adults learn," has taken on a broader meaning since
Knowles' first edition. The term currently defines an alternative to
pedagogy and refers to learner-focused education for people of all ages.
The
andragogic model asserts that five issues be considered and addressed in
formal learning. They include (1) letting learners know why something is
important to learn, (2) showing learners how to direct themselves through
information, and (3) relating the topic to the learners' experiences. In
addition, (4) people will not learn until they are ready and motivated to
learn. Often this (5) requires helping them overcome inhibitions,
behaviors, and beliefs about learning.
Unfortunately, andragogy usually is
cited in education texts as the way adults learn. Knowles himself concedes
that four of andragogy's five key
assumptions apply equally to adults and children. The sole difference is
that children have fewer experiences and pre-established beliefs than
adults and thus have less to relate.
In the
information age, the implications of a move from teacher-centered to
learner-centered education are staggering. Postponing or suppressing this
move will slow our ability to learn new technology and gain competitive
advantage.
How
can we expect to analyze and synthesize so much information if we turn to
others to determine what should be learned, how it will be learned, and
when it will be learned?
Though
our grandchildren or great-grandchildren may be free of pedagogic bias,
most adults today are not offered that luxury. To succeed, we must unlearn
our teacher-reliance.
We
must take it upon ourselves to meet our learning needs and demand training
providers do the same. To know our demands, we must know how we process
information.
Some
of this text was originally published in a whitepaper Marcia wrote in 1995
for Wave Technologies entitled "Learning: The Critical Technology." You
can
download the entire whitepaper
here in
Adobe
Acrobat
format (280K).
-
Pedagogy from the Greek word paid, meaning "child," and agogus meaning
"leader of."
-
Malcolm Knowles (1998).
The adult learner: The Definitive Classic in Adult Education and Human
Resource Development. Houston, TX: Gulf Publishing.
-
John Dewey tested and proved his theories in the Laboratory School,
established at the University of Chicago in 1896.
-
Eduard C. Lindeman (1926).
The meaning of adult education. New York: New Republic.
Redistributed edition 1989.
- In
The Adult Learner, Knowles stated that Andragogy is not a new word. It was used in Germany as early as
1833 and has been used extensively during the last decade in Yugoslavia,
France and Holland. It is also worth noting that in 1927, Martha
Anderson and Eduard Lindeman used the term in a volume titled Education
Through Experience.