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What
Makes Us Good at Learning Some Things and Not Others?
by Mano Singham
One
of the questions that students ask me is why it is that they
find some subjects easy and others hard to learn. Students
often tell me that they "are good" at one subject (say writing)
and "are not good" at another (say physics), with
the clear implication that they feel that there is something
intrinsic
and immutable about them that determines what they are good
at. It is as if they see their learning abilities as being
mapped
onto a multi-dimensional grid in which each axis represents
a subject, with their own abilities lying along a continuous
scale
ranging from 'awful' at one extreme to 'excellent' at the
other. Is this how it is?
This is a really tough question and
I don't think there is a definitive answer at this time. Those
interested
in this topic
should register for the free public lecture by Steven Pinker
on March 14.
Why are some people drawn to some
areas of study and not to others? Why do they find some things
difficult and others
easy?
Is it
due to the kind of teaching that one receives or parental
influence or some innate quality like genes?
The easiest answer
is to blame it on genes or at least on the hard-wiring of the
brain. In other words, we are born
the way
we are, with gifts in some areas and deficiencies in others.
It seems almost impossible to open the newspapers these
days without reading that scientists have found the genes that
'cause' this or that human characteristic so it is excusable
to jump
to genes as the cause of most inexplicable things.
But that
is too simple. After all, although the brain comes at birth with
some hard-wired structures, it is also quite
plastic
and the direction in which it grows is also strongly
influenced by the experiences it encounters. But it seems that
most
of the rapid growth and development occurs fairly early
in life
and
so early childhood and adolescent experiences are important
in determining future directions.
But what kinds of experiences
are the crucial ones for determining future academic success?
Now things get more
murky and it
is hard to say which ones are dominant. We cannot even
say that
the same factors play the same role for everyone. So
for one person, a single teacher's influence could
be pivotal.
For
another, it could be the parent's influence. The influences
could also
be positive or negative.
So there is no simple answer.
But I think that although this is an interesting question, the
answer has little
practical
significance for a particular individual at this
stage of their lives in college.
You are now what you are. The best strategy is to
not dwell on why you are not something else, but to identify
your
strengths and use them to your advantage.
It is only
when you get really deep into a subject (any subject) and start
to explore its foundations
and learn
about its
underlying knowledge structure that you start to
develop higher-level
cognitive skills that will last you all your life.
But this only happens
if you like the subject because only then will
you willingly expend the intellectual effort to study
it in depth.
With things that we do not care much about, we
tend to skim
on the surface,
doing just the bare minimum to get by. This is
why it is important to identify what you really like
to do and
go
for it.
You should also identify your weaknesses
and dislikes and contain them. By "contain" I mean
that there is really no reason why at this stage
you should force yourself to try and like (say)
mathematics or physics or Latin or Shakespeare
or whatever and
try to excel in them, if you do not absolutely
need to. What's the point? What are you trying
to prove and to whom? If there
was a really good reason that you needed to know
something about those areas now or later in life,
the higher-level learning skills
you develop by charging ahead in the things you
like now could be used to learn something that
you really need to know later.
I don't think that
people have an innate "limit."
in the sense that there is some insurmountable barrier that prevents
them from achieving more in any area. I am
perfectly confident that some day if you needed or wanted to know
something
in those
areas, you would be able to learn it. The plateau
or barrier that students think they have reached is largely determined
by
their inner sense of "what's the point?"
I
think that by the time they reach college,
most students have reached the "need
to know" stage in life, where they
need a good reason to learn something. In
earlier K-12 grades, they were in the "just
in case" stage where they did
not know where they would be going and needed
to prepare themselves for any eventuality.
This
has important implications for teaching
practice. As teachers, we should make it
our goal to teach
in such a way
that students
see the deep beauty that lies in our discipline,
so that they will like it for its own sake
and thus be
willing
to make the
effort. It is not enough to tell them that
it is "useful" or "good
for them."
In my own life, I now happily
learn about things that I would never
have conceived
that I would
be interested
in
when I
was younger. The time and circumstances
have to be right for learning
to have its fullest effect. As Edgar
says in King Lear: "Ripeness
is all."
(The quote from Shakespeare
is a good example of what I mean. If
you had told
me when
I was an undergraduate
that
I would
some day be familiar enough with Shakespeare
to quote him comfortably, I would have
said you were
crazy
because
I
hated his plays
at
that time. But much later in life,
I discovered the pleasures of reading his
works.)
So to combine the words from
the song by Bobby McFerrin, and the prison camp
commander
in
the film The Bridge
on the River
Kwai, my own advice is "Don't
worry. Be happy in your work."
Sources:
John D. Bransford, Ann L. Brown,
and Rodney R. Cocking, eds., How
People Learn,
National Academy Press, Washington
D.C.,1999.
James E. Zull, The
Art of Changing the Brain,
Stylus Publishing, Sterling,
VA, 2002.
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