Barriers to Learn University Orientation

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    Clive DunkleyJul 2009

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    Barriers to Learning

    Securing an education in our postmodern society has become increasing complex.

    Schools have to contend with a multiplicity of factors that were either absent or existed to a

    lesser extent within the academic domain. In the early nineteen nineties UCLA researchers

    effort to contribute to school improvement led to examining the barriers to learning by Howard

    Adelman and Linda Taylor co-directors of the Center for Mental Health in Schools. The

    researchers and their team focussed on ways to improve student learning by enhancing policies,

    programs and practices relevant to mental health in schools. In the Summer 2002 edition of their

    newsletterAddressing Barriers to Learning, Adelman and Taylor discussed a causal continuum

    that they created to better define the different types of barriers for students with learning. At one

    end of the continuum are Type III learning problems, which are caused by minor dysfunctions of

    the central nervous system (CNS). This type of learning problem can also be called a learning

    disability (LD). At the other end of the continuum are Type I learning problems, which include

    poverty, overcrowded schools, and psychosocial problems. Type II learning problems, which

    fall in the middle of the continuum, result partly from the students individual differences and

    vulnerabilities and partly from the learning environments failure to accommodate them.

    According to the Concise Oxford English Dictionary 2006, a barrier is a fence or other

    obstacle that prevents movement or access. As found at http://www.answer.com learning is the

    act, process, or experience of gaining knowledge or skill or Knowledge or skill gained through

    schooling or study. Bennett (2003) defines learning barriers as a broad term that encompasses a

    variety of conditions whose defining characteristic is a significant impairment of intellectual

    functioning.

    http://www.answer.com/http://www.answer.com/
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    The definitions from the dictionaries and Bennett leaves an understanding of learning

    barriers as the sum total of things that prevents or reduces the optimum gain from the teaching

    learning experiences. These obstacles may be physical or functional, they may be systemic or

    within the environment of the schools, they may be caused by the teacher or student or they may

    just happen to one or both.

    The Zimbian Ministry of Education argues that proper planning is necessary to support

    learners experiencing barriers to learning at school. The planning should be done at the strategic,

    tactical and operational levels of planning of teaching, learning and assessment. Each school will

    have its own set of barriers that impact on the teaching, learning and assessment process.

    Extensive review of many published work on barriers to learning identified barriers to

    learning that may be categorized as: socioeconomic, systemic, pedagogical/androgogical and

    medical. Educators should be both aware of these barriers and make plans at all level to ensure

    learning takes place.

    Socioeconomic barriers stem from the learners social and economic realities.

    Considerations such as the learners social class and context would be factors that will enhance or

    hinder the learning process. The socioeconomic factors would include: poverty, hunger,

    HIV/AIDS and related problems, teen pregnancy, violence at home and in the community,

    access problems, loss of days in attending school due to participation in economic activities,

    absenteeism and other thing related to each learners context.

    Systemic barriers are blockades that are found within the education system of a specific

    country, region and school system, the barriers may be physical or functional. Systemic barriers

    are usually part of the setting within which learning is to occur. Systemic barriers may include

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    large classes, lack of discipline, large groups of non-reading learners in the class, inadequate

    support facilities such as photocopier, absence of basic utilities such as water and electricity.

    Pedagogical Barriers refer to the anything that would negatively impact on how the

    educators guide the processes in the learning experiences. These barriers may be attributed to

    inadequate academic preparation of teachers, inexperienced academic staff, lack of motivation of

    teachers and other factors that may prevent the teacher from creating a saticfactory

    teaching/learning experience.

    Medical disabilities are more widely documented and include: impaired vision or

    blindness, impaired hearing or deafness, attention deficit disorder, psychosis, epilepsy, albinism

    or other relevant medical conditions and disorders.

    All these barriers can be transcended and learning guaranteed if proper planning is done

    and provisions are made to address the barrier. Within the Jamaican education system efforts

    have been made to address many of the barriers. The school breakfast programme, placement of

    guidance counsellors in schools, revisiting the student teacher ratio, the placing of remediation

    specialists in primary and secondary school are all part of the effort to address these barriers.

    L Ron Hubbard argues that the barriers cited above are not the significant one in

    impeding learning. He argues that lack of mass of what is being studied, too steep a study

    gradient and a word not understood or wrongly understood are the three barriers to learning. L

    Ron Hubbard opines that the most important of these three barriers is word not understood or

    wrongly understood.

    Whatever the barriers to learning are and irrespective of the circumstances responsible for

    the barriers, the educator should ensure that at all times each student learn the lessons. In her

    book education EG Whyte (1952) stated that In many a boy or girl outwardly as unattractive as a

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    rough-hewn stone, may be found precious material that will stand the test of heat and storm and

    pressure. The true educator, keeping in view what his pupils may become, will recognize the

    value of the material upon which he is working. He will take a personal interest in each pupil and

    will seek to develop all his powers. However imperfect, every effort to conform to right

    principles will be encouraged. {Ed 232.2}

    Each child can learn and every child must learn. The secret to overcoming barriers to

    learning includes being aware of the problem, planning at the strategic, tactical and operational

    level to circumvent these obstacles, A commitment on the part of the educator to do everything

    possible to ensure mastery of the learning experiences.

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    REFERENCE

    Bennett, P., (2003). Abnormal and Clinical Psychology. An Introductory textbook. Open

    University Press: Philadelphia

    Hubbard, L. Ron (date). Learning Barriers. Retrieved July 15, 2009, from Applied Scholastics

    Web site:http://www.appliedscholastics.org/learning_barriers/index.php

    Knud, I., (2007). How We Learn, Learning and Nonlearning in School and Beyond.

    Routledge

    White, E., (1952). Education. Pacific Publishing Association

    Answer.com dictionary. Retrieved July 20, 2009

    http://www.answer.com

    Ministry of education Zambia . Barriers to Learning. Retrieved July 17, 2009, from

    http://curriculum.pgwc.gov.za/resource_files/20081200_20110928_Barriers_to_Learning_in

    _the_LP,_WS_and_L_Plan.dochttp://curriculum.pgwc.gov.za/

    Adelman, H. and Taylor, L. (2002). Addressing Barriers to Learning.ADDRESSING

    BARRIERS TO LEARNING Newsletter. Retrieved July 14, 2009

    smhp.psych.ucla.edu/pdfdocs/Newsletter/summer02.pdf.

    http://www.appliedscholastics.org/learning_barriers/index.phphttp://www.appliedscholastics.org/learning_barriers/index.phphttp://www.answer.com/http://www.answer.com/http://curriculum.pgwc.gov.za/resource_files/20081200_20110928_Barriers_to_Learning_in_the_LP,_WS_and_L_Plan.dochttp://curriculum.pgwc.gov.za/resource_files/20081200_20110928_Barriers_to_Learning_in_the_LP,_WS_and_L_Plan.dochttp://curriculum.pgwc.gov.za/http://www.appliedscholastics.org/learning_barriers/index.phphttp://www.answer.com/http://curriculum.pgwc.gov.za/resource_files/20081200_20110928_Barriers_to_Learning_in_the_LP,_WS_and_L_Plan.dochttp://curriculum.pgwc.gov.za/resource_files/20081200_20110928_Barriers_to_Learning_in_the_LP,_WS_and_L_Plan.dochttp://curriculum.pgwc.gov.za/