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by Robert Sylwester
Although it may irritate the teacher, one of the most intelligent questions a
student can ask is "Why do we have to do this?" Students (and the rest of us, for
all that) are loathe to expend cognitive energy unnecessarily, so assessing the
importance of a task is a key initial step in cognition.
This article will focus on our brain's activation systems, on its unconscious and
conscious ability to recognize important dangers and opportunities. Such
recognition is admittedly a small part of a very complex cognitive system, but it's
critical to successful teaching and learning -- as teachers soon discover if they
don't implicitly or explicitly answer the question the student above raised.
Further, recent developments, such as the publication of Antonion Damasio's
acclaimed book, The Feeling of What Happens: Body and Emotion in the
Making of Consciousness (1999), are providing educators with an expanded view
of our recognition system and this poses important educational challenges.
UNCONSCIOUS EMOTIONS
Since our immediate environment is rich in dangers and opportunities that range
widely in importance, our brain needs something akin to a thermostat to
determine when a specific challenge reaches the threshold of being sufficiently
important to activate the several systems that focus attention and develop
appropriate responses. Emotion, centered principally in a small set of sub
cortical brain systems, is our biological thermostat, and so it's central to cognition
(and educational practice). Although emotion is embedded in our language as a
somewhat vague concept, recent scientific developments are clarifying the
terminology, and changing some previously held beliefs about its biology and
function.
That dominance is possible because far more neural fibers project from our
brain's emotional centers up into the logical/rational areas than the reverse. A
sudden emotional stimulus can thus easily and immediately stop classroom
activity -- and it's then neurologically difficult to get students so rationally shut
off their emotional arousal and resume what they were doing. Effective teachers,
realizing that the disruptive emotional arousal will continue until the problem is
resolved, simply take the time to resolve it before resuming what they were
previously doing.
The recent spate of school killings came as a surprise to many educators and
classmates who had worked daily with the perpetrators, and hadn't suspected a
thing. We're similarly surprised when an unnoticed former student turns out to
be very successful. Recall our immune system -- tuned to tiny dangers and
opportunities that are invisible to our brain (which focuses on the visible things).
Do schools need a similar dual monitoring system that can recognize both the
manifest and masked dangers and opportunities that crowd the corridors?
Schools had such a system -- counselors and others whose principal assignment
was to move about the school (like immune cells prowling our body) on the
lookout for potential problems. In a reckless search for economy at any cost,
many schools dismissed them, or burdened them with assignments that
precluded their ability to do what they were trained to do. A tiny unnoticed virus
can soon immobilize an entire body. That's why we have both a brain and an
immune system. Institutions that ignore the little (but emerging) problems do it
at their peril.
5. Although emotions don't solve our problems, they can bias the direction of
the response. Temperament is a seemingly innate element of our
emotional system that unconsciously predisposes emotional arousal
towards danger or opportunity. A person's temperament typically centers
somewhere along a continuum between bold/uninhibited and
anxious/inhibited (Kagan, 1994), with boldness being processed
principally in the left hemisphere, and anxiousness in the right
hemisphere (Siegel, 1999). When emotionally aroused, the bold thus tend
to be initially curious about a potential opportunity, and the anxious wary
about a potential danger. Temperament is thus a useful trait, since it
enhances a quick and confident move towards a response. Because we
frequently follow our temperamental bias, we tend to become quite
competent with it over time. Think of handedness, which similarly
develops exceptional competence with the favored hand.
Either temperamental bias can be useful, so students should be encouraged to
develop whatever nature has given them. But just as it's advisable to divide an
investment portfolio between conservative (danger) and risky (opportunity)
investments, so students should be given opportunities to experience salutation
that would move them away from their temperamental predisposition, and allow
them to practice their back-up system. Projects that effectively team
bold/optimistic students with anxious/pessimistic students can create a
cooperative forum in which the best elements of both approaches can be
synthesized into an effective solution. Indeed, people with different
temperaments often marry and create a successful family team if mutual respect
defines the relationship.
CONSCIOUS FEELINGS
Damasio (1999) suggests that feelings emerge in our brain when we become
conscious of our unconscious emotional arousal to a potential
danger/opportunity. As indicated above, emotions can often be publicly
observed, but our feelings remain a private mental experience of the emotion.
Feelings, which lead us to conscious thought and exploration of the current
challenge, are thus useful, since they allow us to go beyond innate programmed
behaviors, to rationally design solutions to a variety of contemporary challenges
that evolutionary development didn't cover.
Feelings allow us to step into the arcane world of consciousness, the mysterious
mental process that abandons us when we go to sleep, and magically reappears
when we awaken. Consciousness identifies the first-person-singular self that
philosophers, psychologist, and theologians have long tried to define. Not only
do I know something, but I know that I know it. So who is the "I" who is doing all
this knowing (and feeling)? Damasio draws on decades of neuroscience research
and the recent advances in brain imagine technology to suggest how conscious
processes could have emerged in our brain out of the unconscious systems that
regulate emotion. Since school activities focus principally on conscious learning
and behavior, an understanding of the biology of consciousness will be essential
to the development of credible theories of teaching and learning.
Protoself In Damsio's theory, the biology of consciousness begins with a
neuronal arrangement that maps every part of an organism's body into one of
various interconnected brain areas. This mapping is necessary in all animals
because brain and body must constantly communicate in order to maintain a
continuously revised sense of what's happening throughout the organism.
A collection of automated brain systems that Damasio calls the protoself use this
continuous flow of information to manage various life processes, such as
circulation and respiration. The protoself maintains the stability it needs across
its lifetime by operating body systems within genetically established relatively
narrow regulatory ranges.
Core Consciousness: The Present But we're conscious of more than our
own self. Our protoself is imprisoned within the geography of its body, but
sensory/motor and related brain systems also allow a conscious organism to
explore the world. A stable body thus confronts a constantly shifting and
expanding external environment.
So not only does a brain contain a map of its body, but a conscious brain must
also have a mechanism for mapping and connecting to the external world.
Damasio believes that consciousness emerges when the mapped relationship
between organism and an external object (which may be another organism) has
risen to the level of a feeling of what's currently happening.
CURRICULAR CHALLENGES
The Arts. I have argued that the arts play and important role in the
development and maintenance of our motor system, which processes the
concluding stage of most cognitive sequences (Sylwester, 1998). What role might
the arts play in the initiatory stages of cognition (recognition, arousal)?
Unconscious emotions and conscious feelings alert us to biologically important
dangers and opportunities. We're a social species, so it would be advantageous
for a society to have similar alerting systems for culturally important dangers
and opportunities that many people might otherwise not recognize. An
important segment of the arts, mass media, and cultural organizations play such
a social arousal role. This suggests that the not-necessarily-nice-and-pretty arts
are an integral part of the social equivalent of our very important
emotion/attention system. If so, it's folly to reduce school programs that help
students to understand the often critical role of social arousal systems, such as
the arts. It also suggests that if the arts are important to the development and
maintenance of the systems that initiate and conclude cognitive activity, they're
probably also important to the robustness of the systems that process the several
intervening stages. The arts, like consciousness, have been an enigmatic element
of human life -- and like consciousness, they now appear to be researchable in
ways not possible during the past century.
Play. Extended consciousness requires a large cortex, and this creates a birth
canal problem (that all mothers understand). Humans are consequently born
with a very immature brain (13 its adult size) which develops over a long
sheltered childhood. Most animals are born with a substantially developed brain,
and so they're on their own shortly after birth. Their survival is thus dependent
on a large number of innate (rather than learned) brain systems that respond
automatically to the dangers/opportunities their species typically confronts.
Sheltered from the need to protect and support themselves, juvenile humans are
free to use play to consciously explore the dynamics of and alternate solutions to
pretend problems that they devise -- typically childhood versions of various adult
problems they will later confront. But how does a brain unconsciously generate
the requisite emotional arousal without the presence of real danger or
opportunity? Good games do that at a pretend level that extended consciousness
permits, and so much informal childhood motor, language, and social learning
develops easily and without much adult instruction through play/games/contests
that can spark emotional arousal (which then activates our attention, problem
solving, and behavioral response systems).
Further, we continue to use play and games throughout life to maintain the
robustness of our emotional arousal system. Cognitive systems that aren't
continuously used weaken through a use-it-or-lose-it principle, and the reality is
that our primary emotions (surprise, happiness, fear, anger, disgust, and
sadness) typically aren't frequently activated in a consciously controlled real life.
But a game, such as basketball, will frequently and unpredictability (and perhaps
artificially) activate all emotions of players and spectators over its course, and
that accounts for much of the appeal of the game.
Play and games are thus joyfully important emotion/attention machines that can
enhance the quality of a sheltered child's extended learning. It's only in school
that we refer to learning as work. In an era obsessed with assessment and
standards, educators must rediscover the power that play has to activate and
enhance learning. Teachers have always used learning games, but emerging
electronic technologies are creating amazing new instructional possibilities that
are replete with both danger and opportunity. For example, the Fast ForWord
program successfully uses variable speed video game technology to eliminate
specific auditory attentional deficits that negatively affect language development
in young children. Play poses truly exciting challenges for imaginative
educational theorists and researchers.
Classroom Management. The ability to recognize inappropriate social
behavior is a key developmental skill. Misbehavior is to a classroom what pain is
to a body -- a useful status report that something isn't working as it should.
Damasio suggests that pain isn't an emotion, but rather a local tissue dysfunction
that may or may not activate an emotion. Teachers and students similarly
respond to or ignore a variety of behaviors during a school day.
We're a conscious, social species, and we're 200+ years into the creation of a
democratic society that depends on the mastery of social skills and collaborative
behavior. And yet, by defining classroom management as something teachers do
to students, we've ignored the best available laboratory for helping students to
consciously and collaboratively develop social and democratic skills. Many adult
social problems have classroom parallels. When the perspective shifts from
behavior management to curricular laboratory, misbehavior shifts from being
only a negative danger to also being a positive opportunity for teacher and
students to recognize and collaboratively solve real current classroom problems.
How much current misbehavior emerges from student anger at having no voice in
what occurs in a classroom?
One obvious problem is that the social behavior of immature students isn't
exemplary. But neither is anything else when they begin the learning process.
We realize that crawling leads to toddling leads to walking leads to running, and
so allow the process to develop naturally (and not by posting rules and giving
lectures on how to do it). Conversely, schools unrealistically expect exemplary
institutional behavior from day one. Outside of school, children learn social skills
through the emotionally stimulating pretend problem that play engenders, and
they gradually and informally resolve the problems that emerge. The classroom-
as-laboratory would enhance that informal process by explicitly and
experientially developing the requisite social skills.
A social skills curriculum grounded in collaborative classroom management
would develop behavior recognition, data-gathering, analysis, and negotiation
skills. Conceptually, the social management of a classroom involves the same
elements as those involved in the biological management of one's body: decisions
on energy expenditure, space, time, movement, the biologically possible and
culturally appropriate range of behavior. It's nothing really complicated, and
nothing that students should not explore and master. But, it's a scary paradigm
shift in an era obsessed with school efficiency and assessment -- and possessed of
an irrational belief that if we tightly control the behavior of K-12 students for
12,000 hours, the result will be the sudden mastery at 18 of the social skills a
democratic society requires of its adult citizen.
John Dewey began the 20th century with a philosophic plea that schools get
serious about becoming laboratories for the development of the democratic skills
our society requires (1916). He was ignored. Another century has now passed,
and we know much more about development, cognition, and consciousness than
Dewey could have imagined. What we now know suggests strongly that Dewey
was also biologically correct. So will we wait another 100 years?
References
Damasio, A. (1999) The Feeling of What Happens: Body and Emotion in the Making of
Consciousness. New York: Harcourt Brace.
Kagan, J. (1994) Galen's Prophesy: Temperament in Human Nature. New York: Basic Books.
Sywlester, R. (1998, November) Art for Brain's Sake. Educational Leadership, 56 (3) 31-35.