“METHODS OF EDUCATIONAL PSYCHOLOGY”

                                                                              Chapter 3

“METHODS OF EDUCATIONAL PSYCHOLOGY”


“The Chapter at a Glance”
A brief description of the methods of introspection,
observation, experiment, testing and the individual
case study method.
Other miscellaneous methods.
Desirability of a non-sectarian attitude.

“Methods of Educational Psychology”
A science employs certain methods of means for the collection of its data or facts. Like other sciences Educational Psychology too employs a number of such methods. A detailed discussion of these methods is not possible in such a small volume as this. However, in the following pages the most salient features of the following prominent methods will be outlined:-
(1)        Introspection.
(2)        Observation.
(3)           Experiment.
(4)           Testing.
(5)           The individual case study method.
The teacher will himself judge which one of the methods or a combination of them is best suited to a particular types of study in a given field of education.

1. “Introspection”
This is the oldest and an almost obsolete method. Introspection literally means “looking within” when one turns to one’s own self and observes what goes on in the realm of one’s own mind, one is said to be introspecting. Introspection thus is a kind of self observation or self examination. It is a distinct form of observation__ a method of getting knowledge about the individual __a knowledge which is exclusive and peculiar to the individual.

“Direct and First Hand Information”
The distinctive feature of introspection is that it yields direct and first hand information about all that happens in the mind of an individual. There is perhaps no better way of knowing what goes on in the minds of other people than by turning to one’s own mind and observing what goes on there. By looking within, by examining minutely what takes place in our own mind we can not only sharpen our knowledge of our own self but get an insight into the minds of other people too.
Though the information collected through this method is apparently unreliable, dubious and risky, it might, nevertheless, serve the purpose of a teacher in a given case. A teacher, for instance, might say “because I found this happening in my mind in such and such a situation therefore the same might be taking place in the minds of my pupils in similar situations”

“Objections against Introspection”
Several objections have, however, been raised against the introspective method. It has, for instance, been said that in introspection implies the division of the mind into the observer and the observed which is not possible. How can one mind be both the subject and the object at the same time?

Another objection has been that introspection is impossible because the moment we begin to attend to our own mental processes they tend to disappear. Our inner experiences are extremely evasive and short lived. As soon as we turn to think about our joy, sorrow and anger we find that the experience itself either disappears or changes into an entirely different one.

Furthermore, it has been held that the application of this method in educational psychology tantamount to reducing it into a purely subjective branch of knowledge and to excluding if from the realm of the objective sciences.

Another difficulty about this method is that it cannot be employed with children and abnormal people. Children and abnormal persons are usually not capable of turning to themselves and reporting their inner mental process. An Educational Psychologist might do without knowledge of abnormal people to certain extent. But a scientific study and proper understanding of child life can never be ignored by him for obvious reasons.

Owing to these and a number of other defects in the introspective method, modern Educational psychology pays relatively little attention to it.


2. “Observation”
This is a very simple method. It consists in observing the physical signs, appearances, movements and activities of other people and inferring their mental processes from these outward appearances. By observing a radiant smile on a youthful face I can infer that the person is happy. In general everyday life, smiles, tears, scowling and a general limpness of the muscles are usually interpreted as indications respectively of joy, sorrow, anger and fatigue.

“Application in the Classroom”
A skillful teacher makes practical use of this method in the classroom in several ways. He can recognize by minutest outward indications the exact frame of mind of a student in the calls. He can, thereby, see whether or not the student under observation is really attentive to and grasping the lesson in progress. He can also understand the motive of a child who stands up and speaks to him in the classroom. From his observations he can infer his real attitude and meaning i.e. whether he is trying to curry favor or really wants what he asks about; whether he is simply bluffing to avoid punishment or is really sorry and repentant, etc.

Similarly, an experienced teacher can catch the tone of a class from the way the boys sit, listen and behave. By a mere glance at their faces and a careful observation of the minutest sounds, gestures and movements of various individuals and groups in his class the observant teacher can infer a lot. In the like manner a skilled inspector of school or an experienced headmaster, after making a brief tour through a school can tell more of its general tone, standard of discipline and quality of teaching than many of the unskilled and unobservant class teachers.

“Merits and Demerits of Observation”
The method of external observation as described above is full of pitfalls. As we know, the language of the body is full of misleading synonyms. Limpness, for instance, may mean fatigue or disappointment or boredom. Tears may signify joy or sorrow. They may as well result from an irritation of the nose or eyes. Nevertheless, on the basis of his daily observations and experience of handling children a matured teacher must be able to differentiate a gesture of boredom from a gesture of fatigue. The “school teacher’s eye” should be as proverbial as the “miller’s thumb” __an eye which infers a lot from tiny observations of behavior during the course of a class lesson or a general conversation with the students.

The reader will remember that while discussing the method of introspection we found that, being too personal and subjective, it was not a dependable method for Educational Psychology. The method of observation is free from these defects at least. It is predominantly objective and can be safely employed to study the behavior of children in and outside the class-room. Its application by the educational psychologist gives his science the appearance of an objective science. Through the help of this method we can observe as many children as we like. We can then generalize on the basis of these observations. These generalizations can help us to predict and control, fairly accurately, the behavior of children.  

3. “Experiment”
An experiment means observation made under scientific, standardized and controlled conditions. A man watching the flash of lightning produced by the clashing of clouds in the sky is said to be observing the phenomenon of electricity. A physicist observing the various ways of producing electricity by joining two currents in the laboratory is also observing more or less the same phenomenon. The latter observation is an experiment—a controlled observation, while the former is a simple observation. The difference between the two observations is that whereas the conditions in the former are beyond the control of the observer, those in the latter are entirely in the hands of the observer who can control or vary them at will.

“An Experiment in Educational Psychology”
In order to be objective and accurate a science must make frequent use of experiments. Educational psychology also employs this method in its investigation for this very purpose. An experiment is designed to test a hypothesis a detailed investigation about which promises to contribute towards a better understanding in a given filed of knowledge. In an experiment there must be an experimenter who is the psychologist himself and a subject or a group of subjects on whom the experiment is conducted. An experiment in Educational psychology may be conducted in psychological laboratory, a class room, a play field or just anywhere provided the situation and the conditions of work are under the control of the experimenter. It may also be conducted with or without the use of an apparatus.

A common type of standard experiment in the field of Educational psychology is usually conducted by selecting two carefully matched groups of children, one called “experimental” and the other the “control” group. The experimental group is subjected to some definite procedure the educational worth or otherwise of which is to be tested. This procedure is withheld from the control group. The influence of the specific procedure under investigation is inferred from the resulting difference between the two groups of learners who are alike in all other respects excepting the specific procedure under experimental examination.

“Advantages of the Experimental Method”
From the strictly scientific point of view the experimental method is the most significant method of obtaining knowledge in the domain of education. Several important educational problems pertaining to the field of learning, teaching, discipline and administration have been and are being better understood through the experimental method.

For example, in order to study the efficiency or otherwise of a method of teaching science to a particular class through audio-visual aids, a teacher may select two groups of students from the same class, making one the control and the other the experimental group. He may then proceed with teaching science to the experimental group with the help of audio-visual aids. At the same time he continues teaching the same subject to the control group in the usual way, i.e., without employing any audio-visual aids material. At the end of a prescribed period of teaching he might give a test in the subject to both of the groups. If the experimental group does well in the test as compared with the control group he has experimentally proved the efficiency of the teaching method under investigation.

“Contributions of the Method”
The experimental method is now becoming very popular in Educational Psychology. As a result of a countless series of extremely enlightening experiments on educational problems a number of objective and precise techniques of understanding and teaching the children are now available for use in schools. Vision and hearing of children, for example, can now be measured under controlled conditions. Consequent upon experimental investigations in the psychological laboratories a great deal has been discovered about the span of attention, the causes of fatigue and boredom, the teaching and learning of languages and other special subjects, the rate of remembering and forgetting in varying conditions, transfer of learning of desirable and undesirable habits and attitudes by the students, etc.
A successful education of the child and an efficient administration of a school in the modern age needs more and more thorough  and frequent application of the experimental method in actual school conditions and life situations.

“Difficulties in the Experimental Method”
However, there are certain difficulties involved in the use of this method. Every educational problem cannot be subjected to an experimental investigation. Furthermore, great tact and psychological insight is needed to conduct a psychological experiment in a given field of education. Application of the findings of an experiment to an actual class room situation is still more difficult.

These difficulties can, however, be overcome or at least minimized if the experienced school teacher and the learned educational psychologist cooperate with each other. It would be ideal if they undertook to conduct an experimental investigation in close collaboration with each other. Such an experimental cooperation will be of great mutual help to both of them. The educational psychologist will then be able to conduct the experiment in conditions very much like the real teaching and learning situations. Correspondingly, the teacher will experience little difficulty in understanding the nature and purpose of the experiment and in applying the fruitful findings of a specialist in a particular field of education.

4. “Testing”
A science begins by being predominantly qualitative. It ends by being more and more quantitative and precise. In the development of a science a stage comes when it is felt that no generalization, howsoever illuminating and convincing it may seem, can be presented as a valid and reliable statement and be recognized as a general law unless it can be proved by a rigorous testing of the facts it is designed to unify and explain. Advancement in any science depends, to a large degree, on the improvement of its mathematics__ its testing and measuring techniques.

“Work of Thorndike and his Followers”
The method of testing and measuring is employed by the educational psychologist in making quantitative observation of children’s responses to certain educational tasks which are presented under standard conditions. The application of testing in the field of education commonly dates from the work of Thorndike and his followers. In 1904 Thorndike published his first book dealing with measurement. Since then innumerable test and scales have been constructed and utilized in various fields of education.
           
The earliest developments in the field of testing pertained mostly to physical measurement. In later years testing and measuring work was also conducted on simple psychological functions, e.g., reaction time, sensory discrimination, rate of learning and forgetting, etc. More complex functions, for instance, intelligence, honesty and sociability have been subjected to testing and measurement only recently following the pioneer work of Binet, Thornkdike, Terman and others.
           
Mental tests are now rapidly becoming popular in the field of education all over the world. For further details of some of the intelligence, aptitude, personality and scholastic achievement tests and their implications in education, the reader is referred to Chapter XXXIV of this volume especially devoted to their discussion.

“Some Significant Advantages”
The application of testing to the sphere of educational problems has been extremely enlightening. The most significant advantages of testing as applied to the field of education are:-
(1)               It gives a precise, objective and valid score of an individual student as compared with the class or the group to which he belongs.
(2)               Helps towards an understanding of individual difference.
(3)               Helps to make intensive study of the individual as well as the group on reasonable and comparable basis.
(4)               A test score and its interpretation enable a teacher to understand the exact educational standing of a student and to adopt precise measures to make further improvements.

The last mentioned factor is very important. Though various tests devised by the educational psychologists, it has now become possible, for instance, to predict the limitations of a child’s capacity for being educated and to lay down the appropriate lines along which he should be taught.



5. “The Individual Case Study Method”
A detailed study of an individual can be used as a helpful source for making generalizations in the field of education. Usually a summary of observations and interpretation on some important aspects of an individual is included in a case study, e.g., his physical conditions, mental and scholastic level, emotional health, habits and attitudes, family circumstance, etc. Thus, comparatively very little light can be thrown on education problems of the school through minute studies of a few individual alone. Nevertheless, it is an unassailable fact that the mysteries of human personality and the dynamics of the behavior of children at school can be quite thoroughly understood in the light of elaborate case studies of certain illustrative individual cases.

“The prominent Varieties”
Several types of individual case studies are in vogue. Some of the more significant of these are as follows:-
(1)               Case History Method.
(2)               Cumulative Record Method.
(3)               Clinical Case Study Method.
(4)               Personality Studies of Unusual Children.
(5)               Psycho-analytical Personality Studies.

“Case History Method”
A case history is collection of facts about a child brought to the notice of the authority, a child guidance clinic or an outside agency for one or another reason. The purpose of history taking is to obtain the following information:-
(1)        An overall picture of the child’s environment;
(2)        A record of the child’s health and physical, mental, emotional and social development from conception up to date;
(3)          An appreciation of the child’s personality; and
(4)          An understanding of the specific factor (or complaint, if any) for which the child is being studied.
The above-mentioned information is collected from official records, the accounts of the friends, parents and relatives, reports of the teachers, results of any examinations or interviews, and even own story of the child. All these data regarding the child are carefully recorded and interpreted in order to enable the parents, the teacher or the psychological worker to understand the child and to help him in a given situation.

“Cumulative Record Method”
Some of the more advanced educational institutions keep cumulative records of their children. Measurements and observations recorded at various stages of the development of the child are kept as he grows.
This method is superior to the case history method for two reasons:-
(1)                 It records more details than the case history.
(2)                 Being the contemporaneous record of the child’s development at the actual time of growth, it is more reliable than the case history which is reconstructed at a given time by retrospection.

“Clinical Case Study Method”
A clinical study is usually undertaken by an expert only when a child is in some serious difficulty about making a successful intellectual, emotional or social adjustment at the school or home. The main characteristic of this method is that it deals with the life history of the whole individual in his total environment. Tests, planned interviews and other clinical methods are employed to get the necessary information about the child. Relevant data are also collected through the family tree, home life, attitude towards his friends and associates, school career, aspirations, purposes, hobbies, leisure time pursuits, aptitude, intelligence, physical conditions, etc. of the child. The purpose is to have a better understanding of the individual child and to diagnose and treat him for his troubles.

This is very thorough and rewarding method as its proper application is almost certain to save child from developing into a failure in life. The use of this method, however, requires extreme patience, tact, prolonged training and experience in Clinical Psychology.

“Personality Studies of Unusual Children”
Often a teacher comes across a child with an usual capacity or an extra ordinary trait, good or bad, of personality. Exceptionally brilliant or backward, problem, anti-social and delinquent children are some examples of such unusual children. Descriptive studies of such children, highlighting the causes and manifestations of their behavior can go a long way towards understanding and helping them. The author’s studies of some groups of children conducted in tow secondary schools in Lahore are instances or the pioneer studies of this kind conducted in Pakistan.

“Psycho- analytical Personality Studies”
Emotionally disturbed persons of a serious type often need psycho-analytic help. The psychoanalyst establishes a rapport or a closes personal relation with his subject. Under the influence of the rapport he is able to unearth the roots of the deeply buried complexes and conflicts of the subject. He then endeavors to re-educate the subject and enable him to understand his own troubles. This self understanding help the subject in achieving a balance and harmony between the conflicting pulls of his instinctual drives and the demands of the outer world. Anna Freud and Melanie Klein have rendered extremely valuable service in this field by helping innumerable seriously disturbed children through psycho- analysis.

The primary purpose of the psychoanalyst is therapeutic or treating an emotionally sick or abnormal person. During the course of the psychoanalytic treatment, however, the analyst gathers exceedingly useful information regarding the life experiences of the individual with special emphasis on those dating back to early childhood. This information can also prove immensely helpful to a school teacher in understating the behavior of a child who is not understandable otherwise.

The method, again, is very laborious and requires thorough training in psychoanalysis. It cannot be employed by an un-trained person.

6. “Other Miscellaneous Methods”
Some other methods frequently employed by educational psychologists are:-
(1)            The Questionnaire.
(2)            The Check List.
(3)            The Interview.

“The Questionnaire”
It is a popular device for gathering facts and opinions. It consists of series of questions framed in such a manner that the answers bring out the desired information. If properly used it is an extremely easy and valuable method of collecting information regarding an educational problem.

“The Check List”
It resembles the questionnaire method. It generally consists of a long list of questions regarding a given problem. A number of probable answers are also mentioned against each question. The subject is simply to check or put a mark against the particular answer which he considers to be the most appropriate one. This is the main point which differentiates a check list from a questionnaire. In a questionnaire the answers are not given, the subject has to write these down for himself.

“The interview”
Interview is ‘controlled conversation.’ It can also be used to gather useful information during the course of an educational investigation. Interviewing is a fine art and needs great skill and tact on the part of the interviewer. As it is designed to serve some scientific purpose the questions put in an interview should be constructed and analyzed sufficiently well before the actual interview starts. The interviewer watches the general behavior, the tone, and the form and content of the answers supplied by the individual. These observations are then carefully analyzed, interpreted and utilized in the understanding of the problem under investigation.


“DESIRABILITY OF A NON SECTARIAN ATTITUDE”
These are some of the methods that have been and are being employed by the educational psychologists. It may, however, be remembered that in most of the contemporary educational investigations a combination of many methods is usually employed. Seldom does one come across an educational inquiry wherein just one, single method has been employed. A sound and practically very helpful policy for the prospective educational worker would, therefore, be to adopt a liberal, comprehensive and non-sectarian attitude so far as the choice and use of the method is concerned. This means utilization of any and every method wherever it suits the purpose of a particular investigation in hand.



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