what is actual means of EDUCATING PSYCHE??
EDUCATING PSYCHE
Education
psyche by Bernie Neville is a book which looks at radical new approaches to
learning, describing the effects of emotion, imagination and the unconscious on
learning. One theory discussed in the book is that proposed by George Lozanov,
which focuses on the power of suggestion.
Lozanov’s
instructional technique is based on the evidence that the connections made in
the brain through unconscious processing (which he calls non-specific mental
reactivity) are more durable than those made through conscious processing.
Besides the laboratory evidence for this, we know from our experience that we
often remember what we have perceived peripherally, long after we have forgotten
what we set out to learn. If we think of a book we studied months or years ago,
we will find it easier to recall peripheral details – the colour, the binding,
the typeface, the table at the library where we soar while studying it – than the
content on which we were concentrating. If we think of a lecture we listened to
with great concentration, we will recall the lecturer’s appearance and
mannerisms, our place in the auditorium, the failure of the air conditioning,
much more easily than the ideas we want to learn. Even if these peripheral
details are a bit elusive, they come back readily in hypnosis or when we
relieve the event imaginatively, as in psychodrama. The details of the content
of the lecture on the other hand, seem to have gone forever.
This
phenomenon can be partly attributed to the common counterproductive approach to
study (making extreme efforts to memorise, testing muscles, including fatigue),
but it also simply reflects the way the brain function. Lozanov therefore made
indirect instruction (suggestion) central to his teaching system. In
suggestopedia, as he called his method, consciousness is shifted away from the
curriculum to focus on something peripheral. The curriculum then becomes
peripheral and is dealt with by the reserve capacity of the brain.
The
suggestopedic approach to foreign language learning provides a good
illustration. In its most recent variant (1980), it consist of the reading of
vocabulary and text while the class is listening to music. The first session is
two parts. In the first part, the music is classical (Mozart, Beethoven, Brahms)
and the teacher reads the text slowly and solemnly, with attention to the
dynamics of the music. The students follow the text in their books. This is
followed by several minutes of silence. In the second part, they listen to
baroque music (Bach, Corelli, Handel) while the teacher reads the text in a
normal speaking voice. During this time they have their books closed. During
the whole of this session, their attention is passive; they listen to the music
but make no attempt to learn the material.
Beforehand,
the students have been carefully prepared for the language learning experience.
Through meeting with the staff and satisfied students they develop the
expectation that learning will be easy and pleasant and that they will
successfully learn several hundred words of the foreign language during the
class. In a preliminary talk, the teacher introduces them to the material to be
covered, but does not ‘teach’ it. Likewise, the students are instructed not to
try to learn it during this introduction.
Some hours
after the two-part session, there is a follow-up class at which the students
are stimulated to recall the material presented. Once again the approach is
indirect. The students do not focus their attention on trying to remember the
vocabulary, but focus on using language to communicate (e.g. through games or
improvised dramatisations). Such methods are not unusual in language teaching.
What is distinctive in the suggestopedic method is that they are devoted
entirely to assisting recall. The ‘learning’ of the material is assumed to be
automatic and effortless, accomplishing while listening to music. The teacher’s
task is to assist the students to apply what they have learned paraconsciously,
and in doing so to make it easily accessible to consciousness. Another
difference from conventional teaching is the evidence that students can
regularly learn 1000 new words of a foreign language during a suggestopedic
session, as well as grammar and idiom.
Lozanov
experimented with teaching by direct suggestion during sleep, hypnosis and
trance states, but found such procedures unnecessary. Hypnosis, yoga, Silva
mind-control, religious ceremonies and faith healing are all associated with
successful suggestion, but none of their techniques seem to be essential to it.
Such ritual may be seen as placebos. Placebo, but maintains that without such a
placebo people are unable or afraid to tap the reserve capacity of their
brains. Like any placebo, it must be dispensed with authority to be effective.
Just as doctor calls on the full power of autocratic suggestion by insisting
that the patient take precisely this white capsule precisely three times a day
before meals, Lozanov is categoric in insisting that the suggestopedic session
be conducted exactly in the manner designated, by trained and accredited
suggestopedic teachers.
While
suggestopedia has gained some notoriety through success in the teaching of
modern languages, few teachers are able to emulate the spectacular result of Lozanov
and his associates. We can, perhaps, attribute mediocre results to an
inadequate placebo effect. The students have not developed the appropriate mind
set. They are often not motivated to learn through this method. They do not
have enough ‘faith’. They are often not see it as ‘real teaching’, especially
as it does not seem to involve the ‘work ‘they have learned to believe is
essential to learning.
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