Jerome Bruner and The Process of Education: Encyclopaedia
Jerome Bruner and The Process of Education: Encyclopaedia
Jerome Bruner and The Process of Education: Encyclopaedia
9/14/04 5:07 PM
http://www.infed.org/thinkers/bruner.htm
Page 1 of 6
9/14/04 5:07 PM
http://www.infed.org/thinkers/bruner.htm
Page 2 of 6
9/14/04 5:07 PM
In the 1960s Jerome Bruner developed a theory of cognitive growth. His approach (in
contrast to Piaget) looked to environmental and experiential factors. Bruner suggested
that intellectual ability developed in stages through step-by-step changes in how the
mind is used. Bruner's thinking became increasingly influenced by writers like Lev
Vygotsky and he began to be critical of the intrapersonal focus he had taken, and the
lack of attention paid to social and political context. In the early 1970s Bruner left
Harvard to teach for several years at the university of Oxford. There he continued his
research into questions of agency in infants and began a series of explorations of
children's language. He returned to Harvard as a visiting professor in 1979 and then,
two years later, joined the faculty of the new School for Social Research in New York
City. He became critical of the 'cognitive revolution' and began to argue for the building
of a cultural psychology. This 'cultural turn' was then reflected in his work on
education - most especially in his 1996 book: The Culture of Education.
Page 3 of 6
9/14/04 5:07 PM
which such formulations would be found to be valid or invalid conclusions' ibid.: 13) is a
much neglected but essential feature of productive thinking. Here Bruner notes how
experts in different fields appear 'to leap intuitively into a decision or to a solution to a
problem' (ibid.: 62) - a phenomenon that Donald Schn was to explore some years later
- and looked to how teachers and schools might create the conditions for intuition to
flourish.
Motives for learning. 'Ideally', Jerome Bruner writes, interest in the material to be
learned is the best stimulus to learning, rather than such external goals as grades or
later competitive advantage' (ibid.: 14). In an age of increasing spectatorship, 'motives
for learning must be kept from going passive... they must be based as much as possible
upon the arousal of interest in what there is be learned, and they must be kept broad
and diverse in expression' (ibid.: 80).
Bruner was to write two 'postscripts' to The Process of Education: Towards a theory of
instruction (1966) and The Relevance of Education (1971). In these books Bruner 'put forth
his evolving ideas about the ways in which instruction actually affects the mental
models of the world that students construct, elaborate on and transform' (Gardner
2001: 93). In the first book the various essays deal with matters such as patterns of
growth, the will to learn, and on making and judging (including some helpful material
around evaluation). Two essays are of particular interest - his reflections on MACOS
(see above), and his 'notes on a theory of instruction'. The latter essay makes the case
for taking into account questions of predisposition, structure, sequence, and
reinforcement in preparing curricula and programmes. He makes the case for education
as a knowledge-getting process:
To instruct someone... is not a matter of getting him to commit results to
mind. Rather, it is to teach him to participate in the process that makes
possible the establishment of knowledge. We teach a subject not to produce
little living libraries on that subject, but rather to get a student to think
mathematically for himself, to consider matters as an historian does, to take
part in the process of knowledge-getting. Knowing is a process not a
product. (1966: 72)
The essays in The Relevance of Education (1971) apply his theories to infant development.
http://www.infed.org/thinkers/bruner.htm
Page 4 of 6
9/14/04 5:07 PM
Conclusion
Jerome S. Bruner has had a profound effect on education - and upon those researchers
and students he has worked with. Howard Gardner has commented:
Jerome Bruner is not merely one of the foremost educational thinkers of the
era; he is also an inspired learner and teacher. His infectious curiosity
inspires all who are not completely jaded. Individuals of every age and
background are invited to join in. Logical analyses, technical dissertations,
rich and wide knowledge of diverse subject matters, asides to an ever wider
orbit of information, intuitive leaps, pregnant enigmas pour forth from his
indefatigable mouth and pen. In his words, 'Intellectual activity is anywhere
and everywhere, whether at the frontier of knowledge or in a third-grade
classroom'. To those who know him, Bruner remains the Compleat Educator
in the flesh... (Gardner 2001: 94)
To be completed
References
Bruner, J. (1973) Going Beyond the Information Given, New York: Norton.
Bruner, J. (1983) Child's Talk: Learning to Use Language, New York: Norton.
Bruner, J. (1986) Actual Minds, Possible Worlds, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University
Press.
Bruner, J. (1990) Acts of Meaning Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
http://www.infed.org/thinkers/bruner.htm
Page 5 of 6
9/14/04 5:07 PM
Bruner, J., Goodnow, J., & Austin, A. (1956) A Study of Thinking, New York: Wiley.
Gardner, H. (2001) 'Jerome S. Bruner' in J. A. Palmer (ed.) Fifty Modern Thinkers on
Education. From Piaget to the present, London: Routledge.
Links
To cite this article: Smith, M.K. (2002) 'Jerome S. Bruner and the process of
education', the encyclopedia of informal education http://www.infed.org/thinkers/
bruner.htm. Last updated: February 14, 2004.
Mark K. Smith 2002
http://www.infed.org/thinkers/bruner.htm
Page 6 of 6