Jerome Bruner a learning theorist

Jerome Bruner:
a learning
theorist

By Sam Shumaker

Who is Jerome Bruner?
Learning theorist
Associated with the

Constructivist view of
learning
Originated Discovery method

of learning.

Who is Jerome Bruner?
1915: Born in NYC
In WW2 worked for U.S. Army

intelligence reviewing the effectiveness

of propaganda.
1947 : Ph. D. , Psychology from Harvard
Positions on faculties of Harvard,

Oxford, and currently NYU
Founded Center for Cognitive studies

with Leo Postman

Who is Jerome Bruner?
rooted mainly in the study of

cognition
Reacted against behaviorist

model of learning
 founded “New Look”

movement in psychology
Change from behaviorist model


What ideas and influences are
associated with Bruner?
1. Constructivism
paradigm of learning
learners create their own subjective

constructs of reality

2. Discovery learning
(originator)
• method of instruction
• learning is best achieved
through a process of inquiry

What ideas and influences are
associated with Bruner?
Other Constructivists include Piaget, Vygotsky

and Dewey.

Builds on the concept of stages of
development (Piaget)
Environment has bigger role in learning
development.
"any subject can be taught effectively in
some intellectually honest form to any
child at any stage of development.“ The
Process of Education (1960)

What is Discovery learning?
Teaching method
• Inquiry based process
• Focuses on learning through
experience
• Spiral construction
of curriculum (revisits
concepts)

Learner builds on past experience
Students interact with environment

Discovers facts and relationships on own
Students create own construct of knowledge through narrative

Advantages of Discovery Learning
active engagement
promotes motivation
Promotes ownership of learning
the development of creativity and problem

solving skills.
a tailored learning experience

Criticisms of discovery learning
Too much information (cognitive overload)
Often requires vast resources unavailable in

traditional classroom.
Lack of teacher control
Potential misconceptions
Teachers may fail to recognize misconceptions


Examples of discovery
learning
learning with and through narratives
case-based learning
guided discovery
problem-based learning
simulation-based learning
incidental learning

Importance of Narrative
What are the roles of narratives in the

following narrative?
How is this an example of discovery learning?

Repairing Photocopiers
When I arrived at Xerox, back in the 1980s, the company was spending millions and

millions of dollars a year training its 23,000 "tech reps" around the world-the people

who repair its copiers and printers. Lots of that training-it was like classroom
instruction seemed to have little effect. Xerox wanted me to come up with some
intelligent-tutoring or artificial-intelligence system for teaching these people
troubleshooting. Fortunately, before we did so, we hired several anthropologists to
go live in their "tribe" and see how they actually worked.
What the anthropologists learned surprised us. When a tech rep got stuck by a
machine, he or she didn't look at the manual or review the training; he or she called
another tech rep. As the two of them stood over the problematic machine, they'd
recall earlier machines and fixes, then connect those stories to a new one that
explained some of the symptoms. Some fragment of the initial story would remind
them of another incident, which suggested a new measurement or tweak, which
reminded them of another story fragment and fix to try, and so on. Troubleshooting
for these people, then, really meant construction of a narrative, one that finally
explained the symptoms and test data and got the machine up and running again.
Abstract, logical reasoning wasn't the way they went about it; stories were.
This article was originally published in Change, Growing Up Digital, March/April
2000, pp 10-20. It is reprinted with the author's permission and permission of the
Helen Dwight Reid Educational Foundation. It was published by Heldref Publications,
1319 18th Street, NW, Washington, DC 20036-1802. Copyright © 2000.


Websites consulted
Kearsley, G (2008). Constructivist theory. Retrieved February

14, 2008, from Explorations in Learning and Instruction Web
site: http://tip.psychology.org/bruner.html Jerome Seymour
Bruner. (2006).
In Encyclopedia of World Biography [Web]. Thompson Gale.
Retrieved 2/18/2008, from
http://www.bookrags.com/biography/jerome-seymour-bruner/
Learning Theories Knowledgebase (2008, February). Discovery
Learning (Bruner) at Learning-Theories.com. Retrieved
February 18, 2008 from
Bruner, , Jerome S. (2001). In Gale encyclopedia of Psychology
[Web]. Retrieved 2/18/2008, from
http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_g2699/is_0000/ai_2699000
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