Il Dr. Feuerstein e sul perchè l'intelligenza è modificabile
PQ1: Belief
in your fellow man makes you not accept that this individual is lost, that he
will never change
PQ2:
Learning how to learn is the most important thing to do in a world of total
change
It was the
young European Holocaust survivors in Israel that first inspired Professor
Reuven Feuerstein to explore cognitive development, a field he has worked in
for more than 60 years. “These children went through daily and repeated
trauma,” explains the 90-year-old world-renowned cognitive psychologist. “There
was no need for logical thinking. What can logic play in such a situation where
everything is abnormal?”
Feuerstein
is known for his groundbreaking work in cognitive modifiability; rejecting the
idea that intelligence is fixed, he established the principle that all children
can learn how to learn. Born in Romania in 1921, he moved to British-mandate
Palestine in 1945, where he worked to rehabilitate these damaged and often
misdiagnosed children and young people, many of whom were thought to be
developmentally delayed. He then moved on to work with young immigrants from
different countries who had also survived personal, cultural and societal
deprivations and arrived—often alone—in Israel. “We couldn’t lose or give up on
any of them,” says the professor almost 50 years later. “People were measured
as to their cognitive processing, their capacity to adapt,” he says, noting
that testers accepted the belief “that these tests indeed measured in an
unavoidable way what this individual would ever be able to do.”
Feuerstein
noticed that by interacting with the children rather than administering
standardized tests to them, their results improved. He developed an unorthodox
methodology and a theory about the human potential for modifiability, along
with improved learning and functioning in the world, even for people with known
genetic disorders such as Down syndrome. He founded the International Center
for the Enhancement of Learning Potential (ICELP) in Jerusalem, currently run
by his son, Rabbi Rafi Feuerstein. Now 90, the elder Feuerstein shows no signs
of slowing down, helping assess young Ethiopian immigrants for the army and
university, and analyzing what is needed for neuroplasticity in brain-injured
people, the elderly and those suffering from dementia.
BRAIN
WORLD: You worked against the conventional wisdom of the times, where educator
and psychologist were taught that there are critical periods in development—if
you don’t pick up a certain skill within the established critical period it
won’t happen, and that evaluations and their results are static and unchanging.
REUVEN
FEUERSTEIN: You must provide certain kinds and types of stimulation under
certain conditions that lead to the modifiability of the brain. Structural
cognitive modifiability overcomes the traditionally considered barriers to
change—critical periods, severity of condition and etiology. These are no
longer insurmountable barriers of change, due to the linkage between neural
plasticity and cognitive modifiability interventions.
BW: The
modifiability of the brain at different stages—that is the theory you founded,
Structural Cognitive Modifiability (SCM).
RF: The
theory of SCM basically postulated that individuals can be changed in terms of
their cognitive processes in a structural way. This led me to develop a
methodology for assessment [the Learning Assessment Propensity Device, or
LAPD]; for treatment [the Mediated Learning Experience, or MLE]; and the
Instrumental Enrichment Program [IEP] for use in the classroom. This
methodology, which combined a different kind of assessment, along with adapted
behavioral techniques and training, created such a strong effect and made such
strong changes in people’s behavior, it was almost impossible not to speculate
that must be something happening in the neurophysiology. But in the 1950s it
was exactly that—speculation.
When I met
with the great neurophysiologists of the time, Wilder Penfield and Karl
Pribram, they said, “Yes, there must be something happening, but we have no way
to prove it, and to talk about it in a speculative way would be almost
heretical.”
BW: At
first, many people didn’t trust your results.
RF: When
trying to find placements for clients, I had to go to people and say, “Look, he
looks like an idiot, but he’s not. Look, he doesn’t know reading, he’s 17, but
he will learn.”
BW: So what
have you learned from your testing?
RF: We have
had an enormous opportunity to learn more about the way by which the brain
functions on an individual level. If I can find, in some way, to limit what was
described before as a global condition, I can find the modifiability in the
individual. An individual may have great difficulty with change, but if I find
the proper way to reach them, I may create or encourage modifiability, which
makes the individual function better.
BW: So the
MLE is a mechanism for creating change. When testing a person you teach them.
RF: If you
can create change, you can then predict the potential or propensity for further
change. The MLE is but a method in my interaction with you—not just to make you
know something in a passive way but how to produce it, how to create it. I am
not just passing to you information, but passing to you all you that you need
to know in order to be able to learn by yourself. >>Please
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http://brainworldmagazine.com/dr-reuven-feuerstein-on-why-intelligence-is-modifiable/
http://brainworldmagazine.com/dr-reuven-feuerstein-on-why-intelligence-is-modifiable/
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