David Ausabel is a cognitive psychologist who
studied learning theory. Ausabel is credited with the learning theory
of advanced organizers. This theory is easily applicable to second
language acquisition, but transcends a singular application, to
application across educational domains.
Ausabel, along instructional scientists Robert Gagné, Leslie
Briggs, David Merrill, Albert Bandura, Benjamin Bloom, Walter Dick,
and others developed the systems approach which utilizes research on
the conditions of learning required for people to achieve clearly
defined performance outcomes. The model is based upon and has grown
out of a thorough understanding of learning theory and research.
Ausabel believes that meaningful learning is crucial for classroom
instruction. Meaningful learning, according to Ausabel, entails new
knowledge that relates to what one already knows and that can easily
retained and applied. (online)
Advance Organizer entails the use of introductory materials with a
high level of generality that introduce new material and facilitate
learning by providing an "anchoring idea" to which the new idea can
be attached (online). Cognitive
theorists believe that it is essential to relate new knowledge to
existing information learned. Teachers can facilitate learning by
organizing information presented so that new concepts are easily
relatable to concepts already learned. Examples of devices that may
be used include: pictures, titles of stories, reviews of previously
learned concepts, short video segments, a paradigm, a grammar rule,
etc. (direct quote from David Ausubel's Cognitive Learning
Theory).
Ausabel broke down the process of learning to three steps: what will
the person learn, what the person wants to learn, and what did the
person learn?
Ausabel, along with McLaughlin and Ellis, contend that mental
structure
or organization of knowledge highly influences learning. These
theorists grounded their research on the work of Jean Piaget. Piaget
believed that people
actively "organize experience" (online quote from Omaggio, p. 55).
New information must be integrated into the mental structure to be
learned. Human learning entails strategies for thinking,
understanding, remembering and producing language. Language
proficiency depends on understanding, integrating, organizing,
practicing, and automizing subskills needed to communicate.
Restructuring (reorganizing existing mental structure to accommodate
new knowledge) and
automatization (the routine performance of a skill or subskill
without thinking about it) are central to developing language
proficiency (pp. 54-59).