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A reader's reaction to what I wrote here in
December led me to a very interesting article in
Science, where Nisbett et al. report psychological studies that suggest that
"even brief formal training in inferential rules may enhance
their use for reasoning about everyday life events"
(1). But the authors also quote data that imply that chemistry
graduate programs are not very effective in helping students
develop their abilities to apply statistical reasoning and logical
reasoning to unfamiliar problems.
The idea that formal study of abstract systems of
rules develops habits of mind that are useful in reasoning
about concrete problems has been around for a long time. Plato,
for example, argued that study of arithmetic and geometry was
effective in improving reasoning, and that improving the
arithmetical and geometrical skills of its leaders would serve a state
well. Other formal systems, grammar, logic, and languages, were added to arithmetic and
geometry, resulting in the classical college curriculum of the
nineteenth century—a curriculum that did not include
chemistry or other natural sciences.
The incorporation of science into the curriculum
that began in the late nineteenth and early twentieth
centuries was based to some extent on experimental evidence
that cast doubt on Plato's idea that formal training in
reasoning would carry over into all aspects of a person's
intellectual and practical life. Thorndike, on the basis of empirical
research on transfer of training effects, argued that there
are no general inferential rules that apply to all disciplines
(2). Instead there are highly specific empirical rules that
deal with concrete events and apply to other events only to
the extent that the two have identical elements in
common. Piaget agreed with Plato that people use inferential
rules, but argued that these cannot be taught to any
significant extent (3). Every individual develops such rules in the
normal course of maturation, but instruction cannot alter
that development. Both of these positions argue against the
classical, one-size-fits-all curriculum.
Nisbett et al. take an alternative view that is closer
to Plato's: people do use inferential rules, and such rules
can be taught, sometimes by abstract means. However,
Nisbett et al. argue that the rule systems people use naturally
(and that can be taught) are pragmatic and are induced in
the process of solving recurrent everyday problems. With
respect to training in statistical reasoning they found that
either teaching statistical rules or teaching by having
students solve example problems would work. With respect to
training in conditional logic, they found that neither abstract
logical training nor showing subjects how to use rules to
solve problems would work alone, but when these two
approaches were used simultaneously, students learned.
To me the most interesting aspect of the Nisbett
paper is also the most disturbing. Chemistry was one of four
disciplines within which they studied the effect of two years
of graduate work, both on statistical and methodological
reasoning and on applying conditional logic to solve
problems. Two years of graduate study did not significantly
improve chemistry students' abilities in either area, although it
did improve the abilities of medical students and
psychology students in both areas and the abilities of law students
in conditional logic. It appears that reasoning can be
taught, but we are not doing it! (Of course the data might also
imply that our students' abilities are already at such a
high level that they cannot be improved, and we could argue
that the types of reasoning ability the psychologists were
looking for are not needed by chemistry students.)
It is certainly true that in most undergraduate
chemistry curricula students are much more often confronted
with problems that have definite, deterministic answers than
they are with problems that may have several answers or no
answer at all. The chief exception to this is undergraduate
research, which does involve students in questions
to which their experimental answer is not going to
be checked against the back of the book. Since
undergraduate research has obvious benefits in the maturation
of young chemists, wouldn't it make sense to try to make some of the same benefits
available to students in nonresearch courses? But how?
Nisbett et al. provide some ideas for us to try. In
some cases using examples alone, or teaching general
logical rules alone, will suffice. We are at that stage in the
textbooks and teaching methods of many of our
undergraduate courses now. Books are full of very specific examples of
how to solve relatively simple problems. Indeed, some
students don't bother to read the book at all, because
concentrating on the examples will make them successful on our tests.
I think that there are many cases in chemistry
teaching where we need to go much farther than the excellent
examples we already have, and Nisbett et al. reinforce
that belief. More important than either a formal discipline
of logical rules or examples of applying those rules is the
combination of the two: abstract training closely coupled
with concrete, real-world examples (very different from the
textbook examples just mentioned) of how to apply the
abstract ideas in a variety of situations.
I ran the Nisbett paper by a psychologist friend of
mine, and he took it one step farther. The really hard trick,
after knowing abstract rules and being familiar with
examples of applying them, is to know which set of abstract rules
will work in a new situation. (Or, from a more
discipline-chauvinistic perspective, to know to which kinds of
new situations chemistry's abstract rules will apply.
Fortunately there are a great many.) We need to present students
with a broad range of situations where they can practice
skills of choosing and applying abstract sets of rules to
unfamiliar problems. Concentrating too much on the standard,
relatively simple "problems" in most textbooks and
examinations is not enough. So let's work to go beyond that
in creative and effective ways!
Literature Cited
1. Nisbett, R. E.; Fong, G. T.; Lehman, D. R.; Cheng, P. W. Teaching Reasoning"; Science 1987, 238, 625631.
2. Thorndike, E. The Psychology of Learning; Mason-Henry: New York, 1913.
3. Brainerd, C. Piaget's Theory of Intelligence; Prentice-Hall: Englewood Cliffs, NJ, 1978.
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