Problem solving
Introduction
This article aims to address "problem solving" in education, i.e. how one make learners acquire problem-solving skills.
“Problem solving is generally regarded as the most important cognitive activity in everyday and professional contexts. Most people are required to and rewarded for solving problems. However, learning to solve problems is too seldom required informal educational settings, in part, because our understanding of its processes is limited.” (Jonassen, 2000)[1].
Jonassen also states that problem solving is not “sufficiently acknowledged or articulated in the instructional design literature” (p.63). But he also mentioned that problem-solving is at the center of practice in contemporary learning theory: “Contemporary conceptions of student-centered learning environments, such as open-ended learning environments (Hannafin, Hall, Land, & Hill, 1994; Land & Hannafin, 1996) [2], goal-based scenarios (Schank, Fano, Bell, & Jona, 1993/1994) [3], and even problem-based learning (Barrows, 1985; Barrows & Tamblyn, 1980) [4] focus on problem-solving outcomes. They recommend instructional strategies, such as authentic cases, simulations, modeling, coaching, and scaffolding, to support their implicit problem-solving outcomes, but they inadequately analyze or explicate the nature of the problems to be solved” (Jonassen, 2000a).
The anatomy of problem solving
There are many definitions of problem solving both in psychology and related fields and computational sciences.
In a computational perspective, in order to solve a problem, a problem-solver has to perform a certain number of internal and external operations. Each domain of action has in principle a certain number of known operators, i.e. generic actions that can be applied to a certain class of mental or physical objects. An operation is thus defined as concrete realization (application) of an operator. An operator is generally more abstract and more general than one of its possible operation instantiation. Each object that can form a problem is a potential domain of action that can be in different states. Such a state is defined by several sub-states that we can called facts. We can call the set of facts that describe a problem a description. Thus technically speaking, problem solving means transforming states by applying operators to the facts, where a fact can be a mental object or a physical object, and an operation a mental or physical process. This potential domain of action can be call problem-domain.
The selection and use of operators is driven by heuristics at various levels that we will not introduce here for the moment.
Jonassen problem types
In his 2000 article [1] on Toward a Design Theory of Problem Solving, Jonassen identifies a number of problem-solving types: (a) logical,(b) algorithmic, (c) story, (d) rule-using, (e) decision making, (0 troubleshooting, (g) diagnosis-solution, (h) strategic performance, (i) case analysis, (j) design, and (k) dilemma. He later summarized these as five abstract types as presented in the Taxonomy of meaningful learning article. Problems are not the same and each type requires different educational designs.
Bibliography
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Jonassen, D. H. (2007). A Taxonomy of Meaningful Learning. Educational Technology, 47(5), 30–35. Retrieved from https://www.jstor.org/stable/44429440?seq=1#metadata_info_tab_contents
- ↑ Hannafin, MJ., Hall, C., Land, S., & Hill, J. (1994). Learning in open-ended learning environments: Assumptions, methods, and implications. Educational Technology, 34(8), 48-55.
- ↑ Schank, R.C., Fano, A., Bell, B., & Jona, M. (1993/1994). The design of goal-based scenarios. The Journal of the Learning Sciences, 3(4), 305-345.
- ↑ Barrows, H.S. (1985). How to design a problem-based curriculum for the pre-clinical years. New York: Springer.