Personal Background
Jerome
Seymour Bruner is a Psychologist who contributed significantly to the fields of
Cognitive, Developmental and Educational Psychology. He was born blind in 1915
in New York City, New York, USA. However, he attained his eye sight after two
successful surgeries as an infant. He had his first education in a public
school and graduated from high school in 1933. He majored in Psychology and got
his BA Degree in 1937. He then studied in Harvard University which is one of
the world’s most prestigious universities where he received his PhD in 1941 (
Answers, 2013).
Career History
He worked in
Psychological Warfare Division during the Second World War. After this, Bruner
did his research as a member of the Faculty in Harvard University since 1945
and left the faculty in 1970 to teach at the University of Oxford. While he was in Harvard University, he opened
the Center of Cognitive studies in Harvard University. He is currently a senior
research fellow in Law and teaches students as a professor at New York
University since 1991 and still continues his research in Developmental
Psychology. His major contributions to the field involve the books “The Process
of Education” which was widely accepted and thus translated into nineteen
languages and “A Study of Thinking” which was one of the initiators of the
cognitive sciences (DiPrima, M.B & Hickson, M., 2006)
Theory
Jerome
Bruner’s contributions to the theory and development of the field of
psychology:
Cognitive Psychology
Bruner is
known as one of the initiators of the cognitive psychology movement in the US.
He first started to study about perception as an active process rather than a
passive process; i.e, the results of his
experiments on perception showed that perception is not only how an organism
responds to a stimulus but there is also an internal interpretation of the stimulus by that organism. The book “A
study of thinking” published in 1956 is considered the initiator of the study
of Cognitive Psychology.
Bruner came
up with three stages of instruction based on cognitive development. These are:
1. Enactive:
This stage includes learning about the world through actions with physical
objects and the result of these actions. This mode is dominant from birth to
age 3.
2. Iconic:
In this stage learning takes place using pictures and models. This mode is
dominant from age 3 to 8.
3. Symbolic:
In this stage, learner's ability to think in abstract terms develops. This mode
is dominant from age 8 onwards.
All of these
modes are dominant in the above three different stages of development, however,
all three modes are always available and accessible. Bruner suggested using
these three modes together in order to facilitate effective learning.The
diagram below depicts these three modes of learning
(Mr. Mehta Y PD, 2009).
(Mr. Mehta Y PD, 2009).
Diagram 2 Bruner's three modes of learning
Educational Psychology
Bruno
assessed various educational systems and suggested ways to improve these
systems. In his book “The Process of Education” he held the view that education
should not be based on memorizing facts. Rather, more facts will be learnt by
teaching them how something is made. Bruner also suggested a spiral curriculum
where the curriculum does not focus on narrow topics for long periods of time,
rather the curriculum attempts to expose students to different topics over and
over again, every time slightly increasing the amount of information taught (
Answers, 2013).
Developmental Psychology
One of his
most significant and major contributions is in Developmental Psychology. He
came up with the term “Instructional Scaffolding” after studying how children
learned and concluded that children often build on the information they already
know. Instructional Scaffolding is the provision of appropriate guidance and
support to promote learning (Seifert & Sutton, 2009). These supports are temporary and need to be removed
when the child has reached the target or developed his/her own learning
strategies. The following diagram depicts the theory of Scaffolding.
Diagram 2 Scaffolding
Application of theory to the
classroom/teaching
Imagine you
are a teacher and there is a student in your class who is below average and
faces difficulties in catching up with the work given. How would you help the
student to achieve the target and goals by the end of the year? Would you let
him learn by himself or would you provide some sort of support? I am sure you
would agree that the latter would be more beneficial to the student. The
provision of this support to the student is Instructional Scaffolding.
There are
various ways we could apply scaffolding in our classrooms. Some of them are:
1
Providing
appropriate resources: A classroom with different levels of students will
definitely need different levels of support from the teacher. A teacher could
provide different resources according to their needs. For example, providing
extra worksheets of different levels according to the different levels of
students.
2
Providing
guides and templates: For example, when helping students with reading
comprehension, the teacher could provide them with guidelines and templates to
use while reading the passage. Children could be taught to look for answers for
What, Why, When, How and Where questions within the passage in order to better
understand the content. The following video portrays a good example of this.
Video:Guided
Reading with Jenna: Reading Predictions
3. Providing
expert/peer support: You could also, for example, pair an average student
with an above average student or group them so that they can help each other.
Also the teacher could arrange for an expert to come and provide more
information and help to the student.
It is very
important that the teacher removes these supports slowly according to the
students’ improvement and when he/she finally reaches the targets and learns
how to do it by him/herself.
References:
Answers
(2013). Jerome Bruner. Retrieved from:
http://www.answers.com/topic/jerome-bruner
DiPrima, M.B
& Hickson, M. (2006) Discover Jerome Bruner, The Father of Cognitive
Revolution. Retrieved from: http://brunerwiki.wikispaces.com/
Guided Reading with Jenna: Reading Predictions. Video retrieved from:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KhJHzabXTSE&list=PL34A2B2FE7334F95E
Mr. Mehta Y PD (2009). Jerome Bruner Theory. Retrieved from:
http://www.slideshare.net/sanjeevmehta52/jerome-bruner-learning-theory
Seifert, K. & Sutton, R ( 2009).
Educational Psychology, 2nd edition. The Saylor Foundation.