Understanding Psychology (10th Ed)


parts of the task. Her response to questions is noteworthy. For example



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Understanding Psychology


parts of the task. Her response to questions is noteworthy. For example, 
when the daughter asks about how to do “the backbone part,” the 
mother’s response is to repeat the entire process with another salmon. 
The reason? The mother feels that one cannot learn the individual parts of the task apart from 
the context of preparing the whole fi sh. (Tharp, 1989)
It should not be surprising that children raised in the Chilcotin tradition, which stresses 
instruction that starts by communicating the entire task, may have diffi culty with 
traditional Western schooling. In the approach to teaching most characteristic of 
Western culture, tasks are broken down into their component parts. Only after each 
small step is learned is it thought possible to master the complete task. 
Do the differences in teaching approaches between cultures affect how people 
learn? Some psychologists, taking a cognitive perspective on learning, suggest that 
people develop particular learning styles , characteristic ways of approaching material, 
based on their cultural background and unique pattern of abilities (Anderson & 
Adams, 1992; Barmeyer, 2004; Wilkinson & Olliver-Gray, 2006). 
Illustrating observational learning, this infant observes 
an adult on the television and then is able to imitate 
his behavior. Learning has obviously occurred through 
the mere observation of the television model.
Exploring
D I V E R S I T Y
Does Culture Infl uence How We Learn?
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Learning styles differ along several dimensions. For example, one central dimen-
sion is relational versus analytical approaches to learning. As illustrated in Figure 3, 
people with a relational learning style master material best through exposure to a full 
unit or phenomenon. Parts of the unit are comprehended only when their relation-
ship to the whole is understood. 
In contrast, those with an analytical learning style do best when they can carry 
out an initial analysis of the principles and components underlying a phenomenon 
or situation. By developing an understanding of the fundamental principles and 
components, they are best able to understand the full picture. 
According to James Anderson and Maurianne Adams, particular minority groups 
in Western societies display characteristic learning styles. For instance, they argue 
that Caucasian females and African-American, Native-American, and Hispanic-
American males and females are more apt to use a relational style of learning than 
are Caucasian and Asian-American males, who are more likely to employ an ana-
lytical style (Adams et al., 2000; Anderson & Adams, 1992). 
The conclusion that members of particular ethnic and gender groups have similar 
learning styles is controversial. Because there is so much diversity within each particu-
lar racial and ethnic group, critics argue that generalizations about learning styles can-
not be used to predict the style of any single individual, regardless of group membership. 
Still, it is clear that values about learning, which are communicated through a per-
son’s family and cultural background, have an impact on how successful students are 
in school. One theory suggests that members of minority groups who were voluntary 
immigrants are more apt to be successful in school than those who were brought into 
a majority culture against their will. For example, Korean children in the United States—
the sons and daughters of voluntary immigrants—perform quite well, as a group, in 
school. In contrast, Korean children in Japan, who were often the sons and daughters 
of people who were forced to immigrate during World War II, essentially as forced 
laborers, do less well in school. The theory suggests that the motivation to succeed is 
lower for children in forced immigration groups (Foster, 2005; Ogbu, 1992, 2003).

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