
In the last few years, I’ve increasingly wondered if “schema theory” just might work a special kind of magic.
If I understand it right (and if it’s true), then schema theory unites two distinct topics:
the cognitive science behind good teaching, and
the curriculum.
Because that result would be, ahem, SPECTACULAR, the theory merits careful attention.
In this post, I’ll try to explain:
What schema theory is,
Why teachers should care, and
What its limitations seem to be.
I’m thinking of this post as the first of a series: I hope to flesh out this concept more substantially over time.
What Is Schema Theory?
Schema theory models the mental structure of knowledge.
In other words: if I say that I know something, schema theory tells me what that knowledge might look and act like in the mind.
This theory rests on two key points.
First: a schema comprises a vast, interconnected web of declarative and procedural knowledge.
So, if I say “I know what a ‘pet’ is,” I’m claiming to have a “pet” schema. That schema includes declarative/procedural knowledge:
Specific animals: dog, cat, goldfish, hamster.
Concepts, like “tame” or “belongs inside the home.”
Procedures, like “take for a walk” or “clean the litterbox.”
Second: in those schema, the bits of knowledge function together fluently, which is to say automatically.
If I tell a friend that I’ve gotten a new pet, she would IMMEDIATELY know a) that I’m talking about a particular group of animals, b) that my furniture might be in peril, and c) that our early morning walks might be disrupted if I’m bringing a dog along.
She doesn’t have to stop and think her way through all those pieces. They spring instantly to mind, because she has activated the “pet”schema.
Similarly, if I told her I’d gotten a pet lion, she would IMMEDIATELY think
“Lions aren’t typically pets!”
“I wouldn’t want a lion inside my house!!”
“I wonder who has to clean THAT litterbox!!!”
Those thoughs all happen unprompted because I’ve violated the “pet” schema, and she’s trying to make “lion” fit into it.
To review these two key points:
LOTS of intricately connected declarative and procedural information,
used FLUENTLY/AUTOMATICALLY together.
That’s a (very basic definition of a) schema.
Why Teachers Should Care About Schema
Two reasons (at least).
First:
We teachers often struggle to identify our goal. Do we want our students to…
… achieve today’s learning objective?
… demonstrate proficiency in the curriculum?
… meet the state standards?
If yes, which of these goals takes priority?
In my view, the concept of “schema” brings all those goals together.
When students build effective and useful schema, they unite granular bits (say, “learning objectives”) into larger coherent and fluent wholes (say, “the curriculum” as a way of meeting “state standards”).
In other words, no matter which way we think about students’ acadecmic and curricular progress, we can talk about “schema.” Conversations that once seemed fragmented and incoherent can come together into a complex, thoughtful whole.
Second:
Cognitive science helps us understand the strategies that most effectively build schema.
How do we get all those small bits (“cat, dog, clean litterbox, tame, not lion”) to fit together so they operate fluentely as a whole (“pet”)?
Well, let’s talk about working memory. And retrieval practice. And generative learning. And desirable difficulties. And…
In other words:
We can use the same conceptual structure (“schema theory”) to unite the content we want to teach with cognitive science.
We’ve got one big framework that captures both curriculum and pedagogy.
That’s (potentially) AMAZING AND HELPFUL.
Just imagine how clarifying such conversations could be.
What Are the Limitations of Schema Theory?
In a word: research. As far as I can tell, we ain’t got much.
When I ask about the research basis for schema theory — asking for a “research basis” is a hobby of mine — I get incomplete answers.
Some folks refer me to scholars who wrote in the 1950s (or 1930s). That’s an interesting theoretical basis, but it isn’t current psychology research.
Others point to individual studies here and there. (Anderson 1983 gets a lot of attention.) But those individual studies — in my view — don’t (yet) remotely add up to strong support for the theory.
One scholar I spoke with responded with this question: “well, how would you research the theory? What study would you do?”
That’s an important question…but in this field we focus on research-based assertions. We can’t simply wave away the need for research.
I’ve been trying to make sense of this research field in recent months; I’m currently working with a friend to organize it all.
So, here’s the conundrum I face:
Schema theory could be spectacularly useful.
We don’t seem to have lots of research making a strong case for the theory (although LOTS of people act as if we do).
Of course, at Learning and the Brain, we’re ALL ABOUT the research. Until I see more, I’m always hesitant to espouse the theory — no matter how useful — too strongly.
Some Additional (Unrelated) Notes
First:
Oddly, schema theory lives a double life.
In Britain, it’s old news. I believe they went through a “schema theory” phase 20 years ago, and now Brits (well, Brits on eduTwitter, anyway) talk about schemas as if we all know what they are.
In the US, almost no one talks about them at all. (I am, as far as I know, the only person in Learning-and-the-Brain world to do so regularly).
Second:
Technically speaking, the plural of “schema” is “schemata” (think “stigma/stigmata”). Very few people actually use that word. Some say “schemas.” Others use “schema” as both singular and plural.
Third:
If you know from schema theory, you’re quite possible vexed that this post is so inadequate.
I haven’t linked to Dr. Efrat Furst’s specatularly useful website. I haven’t linked to Sarah Cottingham’s immensely helpful blog post.
I’ve even left out the famous restaurant example — everyone’s go to for explaining a schema.
This frustration has merit, because I’ve barely introduced a complex (and potentially vitally important) topic.
If you have studies you want to share, books to recommend, websites to laud, PLEASE let me know.
I’ll keep working out my thinking, and I’m hoping you’ll help me along the way.