Education As Social Invention: Jerome S. Bruner
Education As Social Invention: Jerome S. Bruner
Jerome S. Bruner
I am deeply moved and honored to be giving this Presidential
Address to the Society for the Psychological Study of Social Issues,
for the Society has always represented to me the conscience of American psychology. Its past presidents make up a roster not only of
distinction, but also of goodwill and generous spirit.
We have been a Society that has tended in the main to concem
itself with those social issues that press for immediate solution either
within the academic community or in the society at large^war and
peace, poverty, academic freedom, discrimination and desegregation,
through the list of issues of deep contemporary concem. I hope that
our Society will continue to take such matters to conscience and to
bring them before our colleagues for debate and, finally, for such
action as we can take as socially responsible psychologists.
But there are other issues that do not have such immediate concem, that in their nature do not move swiftly enough to mobilize
the moral indignation they merit as social issues. We must be sure
that we do not neglect these, for they are often the forces that shape
our lives and our future. One such issue is the nature of the education a society provides for the generation that is to follow. I should
like to address myself to this issue, to argue the critical importance
of redefining afresh the nature, direction, and aims of education if
man is to remain free to develop his full potential as a human
being. I shall do so as a psychologist concerned with social issues,
for I deeply believe that education must be viewed as a social and
moral issue before it can be approached sensibly as a technical one.
It seems to me that there are four particularly important bases
in terms of which the redefinition of education must proceed if we
mean to give man his full freedom to develop.
The first of these derives from our increasing understanding of
man as a species. As one reads the enormously rich reports of the
last decade or two, it is plain that there has been a revolution in our
conception of the species Homo, and it is a revolution that forces
us to reconsider what it is we do when we occupy man's long growing
period in certain ways now familiar as "schooling."
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educational policy as in defense policy. It is, if you will, the psychologist's lively sense of what is possible that can make him a powerful force. It is in his delineation of the possible that he enters the
political process. If he fails to fill his role as a diviner and delineator
of the possible, then he does not serve the society wisely. If he confuses
his function and narrows his vision of the possible to what he counts
as desirable, then we shall all be the poorer.
You will forgive me for this diversion from the main theme; it
is a matter that my brooking has not clarified. The psychologist is
the scouting party of the political process where education is concerned. He can and must provide the full range of alternatives ta
challenge the society to choice. And now back to the main theme.
How evaluate education in the light of our newly gained
knowledge of man as a species? Let me begin by proposing a view
that might best be called evolutionary instrumentalism. Man's use of
mind is dependent upon his ability to develop and use "tools" or
"instruments" or "technologies" that make it possible for him to
express and amplify his powers. His very evolution as a species speaks
to this point. It is consequent upon the development of bipedalism
and the use of spontaneous pebble tools that man's brain and
particularly his cortex developed. It was not a large-brained hominid
that developed the technical-social life of the human, but rather the
tool-using, cooperative pattern that gradually changed man's morphology by favoring the survival of those who could link themselves with
tool systems and disfavoring those who tried to go it on big jaws,
heavy dentition, or superior weight. What evolved as a human
nervous system was something, then, that required outside devices
for expressing its potential. It was a swift progress. The first primitive
primates appear 5 X W years ago and man reaches his present
morphology and brain size about 5 X 10^ years agowith the
major developments from higher hominid to tool-user occupying,
likely, less than half a million of these years between. From then on,
all major changes in the species are, in Weston La Barre's (1954)
startling phrase, by prosthetic devices, by man learning how to link
himself to amplifiers of his muscles, of his senses, and of his powers
of ratiocination.
The British biologist Peter Medawar (1963) remarks in his recent
Huxley Lecture that it is likely that at about this same point in
human history (reckon it in same multiple of 10^) that human culture
becomes suflBciently elaborated for evolution to become Lamarckian
and reversible rather than Darwinian and irreversible. It is a figure
of speech, of course, but Medawar's point is well taken: what is
transmitted by the culture is indeed a pool of acquired characteristics,
a pool that can get lost just as surely as the Easter Islanders, the
Incas, and Mayans lost whatever skills made it possible for them
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JEKOME S. BRUNER
propositions rather than objects; there are more serious and lasting
effects from brain injury, concepts become more exclusively hierarchal in structure, alternative possibilities can be handled in a
combinatorial fashion. There is considerable doubt whether all these
things have anything directly to do with the onset of physiological
adolescencefor there are equally sharp cognitive turning points at
the onset of language, and at the age five-to-seven turning point without much discernible assist from hormonal tides. And hormonal adolescents in technically less mature societies never enter this so-called
stage.
What comes out of this picture, rough though I have sketched it,
is a view of human beings who have developed three parallel systems
for processing information and for representing itone through
manipulation and action, one through perceptual organization and
imagery, and one through the symbolic apparatus. It is not that these
are "stages" in any sense, but rather emphases in development: that
one in some measure must master the manipulation of concrete objects
before there can be perceptual decentration, or in simpler terms, that
you must get the perceptual field organized around your own person
as center before you can impose other, less egocentric axes upon it, and
so on. In the end, the mature organism seems to have gone through a
process of elaborating three systems of skills that correspond to the
three major tool systems to which he must link himself for full expression of capacitiestools for the hand, for the distance receptors, and
for the process of reflection.
It is not surprising in the light of this that early opportunities for
development have loomed so large in our recent understanding of
human mental growth. The importance of early experience is only
dimly sensed today. The evidence from animal studies (Freedman, et
al., 1961) indicates that virtually irreversible deficits can be produced
in mammals by depriving them of opportunities that challenge their
nascent capacities. Now in the last few years there have been a suflBcient number of reports to indicate the crippling effect of depriving
human environmentsas well as indications that "replacement therapies" can be of considerable success, even at an age on the edge of
adolescence. The principal deficits appear to be linguistic in the broadest sensethe lack of opportunity to share in dialogue, to have occasion for paraphrase, to internalize speech as a vehicle of thought. None
of these matters is well understood, save that there appears to be the
operation of the rule discussed earlier: that unless certain basic skills
are mastered, then later more elaborated ones become increasingly out
of reach. It is in the light of this fact that we can understand the increasing difference in intelligence with age between such culturally
deprived groups as Southern Negroes and more culturally privileged
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It may well be the case that not only are we entering a period of
technological maturity in which education will require constant redefinition, but that the period ahead may involve such a rapid rate of
change in specific technology that narrow skills will become obsolete
within a reasonably short time after their acquisition. Indeed, perhaps
one of the defining properties of a matured technology is that there
exists a lively likelihood of major technological change within the compass of a single generationjust as ours has seen several such major
changes.
I entertained myself and some young students with whom I was
working this past summer to devise a social studies curriculum by
formulating Bruner's Rulecritical changes related to the order of
magnitude in years away. I used this as an extension of the square law
for the retinal anglethat the size of the image was the reciprocal of
the square of the distance of an object. Therefore, the further away a
period of time, the larger it would have to be to be discerned.
Here goes.
5,000,000,000
Birth of Earth
5 X 10
500,000,000
Vertebrates
5 X 10
50,000,000
Mammals
5 X 10^
5,000,000
Primates
5 X 10"
500,000
Present man
5 X 10
50,000
Great migrations
5 X 10*
5,000
Recorded history
5 X 10
500
Printing
5 X lO''
50
Radio/mass
education
5 X 10^
Artificial intelligence
5
5 X 10
What I learned from my charts (never mind the students for a moment) was that things were coming thick and fast. Life probably
started about 2.5 X 10" so that half the history of the Earth was lifeless. Some 99.999% of the Earth's life has been manless, and from
there on out the record is impressive and awesome. It would seem
indeed as if the principal thing about tools and techniques is that
they beget other more advanced ones at ever increasing speed. And
as the technology matures in this way, education in its very nature
takes on an increasing role by providing the skills needed to manage
and control the expanding enterprise.
The first response of educational systems under such acceleration
is to produce technicians and engineers and scientists as needed, but
it is doubtful whether such a priority produces what is required to
manage the enterprise. For no specific science or technology provides
a metalanguage in terms of which to think about a society, its technology, its science, and the constant changes that these imdergo
with innovation. Gould an automotive engineer have foreseen the
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rivation: facts in search of a theory. J. nerv. ment. Dis., 1961, 132, 17-43.
HEBB, D . Organization of behavior. New York: Wiley, 1949.
LABARHE, W . The human animal. Chicago: Univer. Chicago Press, 1954.
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NEHVI, P . IS architecture moving toward forms and characteristics which are unchangeable? In G. Kepes (Ed.), Structure in art and science. New York:
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