Popular Posts

Tuesday 19 January 2016

What has the placebo effect got to do with Education?

Last night I attended the Biennial Kass lecture entitled “On the Efficacy of Placebos’. It was given by Charles Rosenberg. Professor of the History of Science (Emeritus) at Harvard.  I am getting involved with the History of Science, Technology and Medicine so as to become familiar with different ways of knowing and thinking, as a way to distance myself from disciplinary thinking in Education and Neuroscience and thereby gain another perspective for critiquing popular or accepted wisdoms. Rosenberg began by providing a definition of placebo ‘ a label for a shallow momentary effect’ and described how it was discussed in History; as a distractor in the eighteenth century, the patient wanting something in the nineteenth century while our modern day Wikipedia describes it as a form of deceit.
For medicine it is generally assumed that a placebo lacks efficacy and that is why it is given in many randomised clinical trials of treatment effects. Rosenberg raised a challenging question about this assumption.  Is it the case that a placebo is inert/ineffective? Or is the act of receiving a placebo from the doctor the active ingredient?

A similar question could be raised in Education. Lets assume that any intervention based on a neuromyth has the status of a placebo. What if a neuromyth for example, teaching according to a student’s learning style preference, has transactional efficacy? Although irrelevant neuroscientifically it has relevance for the student and therefore works for them, it provides a structure of choice for the student Also, the active ingredient could be in the interaction dynamics between the student and the teacher. There is also the question of whether the intervention has its placebo effect on the teacher who provides it.  It is an idea that may explain why teaching to learning style has become embedded in educational culture as a ‘good’ thing.

No comments:

Post a Comment