What is learning? Is it a change in behaviour or understanding? Is it a process? Here we survey some studies about learning.
I am talking about LEARNING - the insatiable curiosity that drives the child to learn so many things starting from birth..I am talking about the student who says, "I am discovering, drawing in from the outside, and making that which is drawn in a real part of me".I am talking about any learning in which the experience of the learner progresses along this line: "No, no, that's not what I want"; "Wait! This is closer to what I am interested in, what I need"; "Ah, here it is! Now I'm grasping and comprehending what I need and what I want to know!" Carl Rogers .Learning about learning is curious rite....?????
some studies discovered that learning can be viewed as a process and also a product..how is it??..
let's see their words..
Learning as a product
Pick up a standard psychology textbook - especially from the 1960s and 1970s and you will probably find learning defined as a change in behavior. In other words, learning is approached as an outcome - the end product of some process. It can be recognized or seen. This approach has the virtue of highlighting a crucial aspect of learning - change. It's apparent clarity may also make some sense when conducting experiments. However, it is rather a blunt instrument. For example:
- Does a person need to perform in order for learning to have happened?
- Are there other factors that may cause behaviour to change?
- Can the change involved include the potential for change? (Merriam and Caffarella 1991: 124)
Learning as a process - task-conscious or acquisition learning and learning-conscious or formalized learning
Säljö identified that we can see learning appearing as a process - there is a concern with what happens when the learning takes place. In this way, learning could be thought of as 'a process by which behaviour changes as a result of experience' (Maples and Webster 1980 quoted in Merriam and Caffarella 1991: 124). One of the significant questions that arises is the extent to which people are conscious of what is going on. Are they aware that they are engaged in learning - and what significance does it have if they are? Such questions have appeared in various guises over the years - and have surfaced, for example, in debates around the rather confusing notion of informal learning.
One particularly helpful way of approaching the area has been formulated by Alan Rogers (2003). Drawing especially on the work of those who study the learning of language (for example, Krashen 1982), Rogers sets out two contrasting approaches: task-conscious or acquisition learning and learning-conscious or formalized learning.
Task-conscious or acquisition learning. Acquisition learning is seen as going on all the time. It is 'concrete, immediate and confined to a specific activity; it is not concerned with general principles' (Rogers 2003: 18). Examples include much of the learning involved in parenting or with running a home. Some have referred to this kind of learning as unconscious or implicit. Rogers (2003: 21), however, suggests that it might be better to speak of it as having a consciousness of the task. In other words, whilst the learner may not be conscious of learning, they are usually aware of the specific task in hand.
Learning-conscious or formalized learning. Formalized learning arises from the process of facilitating learning. It is 'educative learning' rather than the accumulation of experience. To this extent there is a consciousness of learning - people are aware that the task they are engaged in entails learning. 'Learning itself is the task. What formalized learning does is to make learning more conscious in order to enhance it' (Rogers 2003: 27). It involves guided episodes of learning.
Learning involves many aspects...Learning about learning is also a life-long process.....