Magazine 2013
- Journal 2013
- Journal 2013 – Index
- Lifestyle And Behavioural Pattern Of The Youth (12)
- Global Economic Financial Crisis : Impact On Banks In India (16)
- Inflation In India : An Empirical Study (24)
- Mall vis-à-vis Pop and Mom Shop– A Survey in Mumbai City (30)
- Place of Handicraft Cottage Industries in Savarkundala Town (35)
- Gender Audit Of Budgets In India (2001-2 to 2010-11) (40)
- Human Development Strategy In India : A New Paradigm (50)
- FDI In Multi-Brand Retail: Boon Or Curse? (56)
- Job Satisfaction In The Banking Sector-A Comparative Study (62)
- Climate Change: Mitigation And Adaptation. (70)
- Brain – Drain Versus Brain- Gain (75)
- Railway Raju To Guide Raju-R.K.Narayan’s Guide (79)
- ‘Body of Evidence’: The New Breed Of Indian Crime Fiction Writers – Cares And Concerns (83)
- The Paradox of Progress And Change in India: Voices Of Dissent And Assent In Arvind Adiga’s Novel The White Tiger (86)
- Marginalisation Of Women Characters In Kiran Desai’s Inheritance Of Loss (91)
- Development Of Writing Ability In Final Year Under Graduate Students Of Mumbai University (94)
- The Strange Case Of Billy Biswas – A Turbulent Journey Of An Existentialist (100)
- Children Of The Hills: Environmental Consciousness In The Folk-Literature Of The Dungari Bhils (104)
- A Communicative Catharsis Of Political Violence: Intercultural Narration Of Violence And Migration In Adib Khan’s Spiral Road (110)
- Re-writing Partition Violence With Special Focus On Bhisham Sahani’s Tamas (114)
- A Comparative Study Of Ruskin Bond’s A Flight Of Pigeons And Bhisham Sahni’s Tamas (117)
- Impact Of Technology On English Language And Its Teaching (120)
- Physical Activity & Fitness In Children (124)
- Green Clothing – The Latest Trend In Practice (132)
- Impact Of Culture On Field Independence/ Field Dependence As A Function Of Learning Styles (182)
- Internet: This Century’s Bliss Or Bane (188)
- Women Farmers of India: A Growing Force Without A Growing Voice (192)
- Urban Infrastructure And Financing Bodies In Mumbai (197)
- Nashik: Development Into A Pilgrim Centre (203)
- The Study Of Salient Features Of Gandhian Ashrams (206)
- Is Internet Youngster’s E-Connect Or Disconnect? (213)
- Population Ageing In India And Care for The Elderly (217)
- The Last Lecture (225)
- List of contributors (227)
International Peer-Reviewed Journal
RH, VOL. 3 JULY 2013
PSYCHOLOGY
Impact Of Culture On Field Independence/Field
Dependence As A Function Of Learning Styles
Cicilia Chettiar
ABSTRACT
This paper develops a framework for understanding the relationships between approaches to
learning adopted by students in the context of higher education and the concept of field dependence/
field independence. This is a cognitive variable that affects the learning style of the individual. Sometimes
it is referred to as global versus analytic thinking and it reflects on how learners think and process
information. The field dependent learner is one who processes information globally. This learner is less
analytical, not attentive to detail, and sees the perceptual field as a whole. This whole resists analysis or
decomposition. The field independent person on the other hand can easily break the field down into its
component parts. He/she is typically not influenced by the existing structure and can make choices
independent of the perceptual field. There is very little disagreement that a relationship does exist
between the culture in which children live (or from which they are descended) and their preferred ways
of learning. This relationship, further, is directly related to academic, social, and emotional success in
school. We will look at how students vary along the continuum of field dependence/field independence
as a direct consequence of belonging to a particular culture. Our ability to give every child a chance to
succeed in school depends upon a full understanding of culture and learning styles. After all, effective
educational decisions and practices must emanate from an understanding of the ways that individuals
learn. Consequently, knowing each student, especially his or her culture, is essential preparation for
facilitating, structuring, and validating successful learning for all students.
Keywords - Cognition, culture, field independence/dependence, learning styles.
Introduction
Psychologists have long been aware that people differ in the consistent ways in which they receive and
respond to information. Some make careful distinctions between stimuli, whereas others blur distinctions, and
some may typically prefer to make broad categories, whereas others prefer narrow ones for grouping objects.
These consistencies in an individual seem to be fairly stable across time and even across situations. They have
been referred to as cognitive controls. Combinations of several cognitive controls within a person have been
referred to as cognitive style, of which there can be numerous variations.
There appears considerable confusion in the literature concerning the terms cognitive and learning styles.
Numerous authors and researchers use the terms interchangeably. However, various authors draw a distinction
between cognitive and learning style. Learning styles refer to ways that people learn information, and cognitive
styles are more global, referring to the way that people see the world around them and interact with it (Jonassen
&
Grabowski, 1993).
Learning styles are less specific than cognitive styles. Because learning styles are based on self-report
measures, validity is one of the most articulated problems. Moreover, as speculated by some researchers,
...learning styles may not be legitimate research tools, “... they are useful methods for eliciting self-reflection
“
and an understanding of the learning process” (Jonassen & Grabowski, 1993; p. 234).
There are various recognized cognitive styles available in the literature, among which are visual/haptic,
visualizer/verbalizer, leveling/sharpening, serialist/holist, and field dependent/independent. This paper will focus
on only the field dependent / independent style.
According to Witkin and Goodenough (1981), people are termed field independent (FI) if they are able
to abstract an element from its context, or background field. In that case, they tend to be more analytic and
approach problems in a more analytical way. Field dependent (FD) people, on the other hand, are more likely
(182)
International Peer-Reviewed Journal
RH, VOL. 3 JULY 2013
to be better at recalling social information such as conversation and relationships. They approach problems in
a more global way by perceiving the total picture in a given context.
Daniels (1996) summarizes the general tendencies of field dependent and independent learners as follows:
Field-dependents
•
•
•
•
•
Rely on the surrounding perceptual field.
Have difficulty attending to, extracting, and using non salient cues.
Have difficulty providing structure to ambiguous information.
Have difficulty restructuring new information and forging links with prior knowledge.
Have difficulty retrieving information from long-term memory.
Conversely, field-independents
•
•
•
•
•
Perceive objects as separate from the field.
Can disembed relevant items from non-relevant items within the field.
Provide structure when it is not inherent in the presented information.
Reorganize information to provide a context for prior knowledge.
Tend to be more efficient at retrieving items from memory
Field Dependency and Academic Achievement
Bassey et. al. in their study have cited Murphy, Casey, Day, & Young (1997) & Cakan, (2000) and stated
that cognitive style has been reported to be one of the significant factors that may impact students’ achievement
on various school subjects. In another research study, Dwyer and Moore (1995), as cited by Bassey et.al.
investigated the effect of cognitive style on achievement with 179 students who enrolled in an introductory
education course at two universities in the United States. They found the field independent learners to be
superior to field dependent learners on tests measuring different educational objectives. The researchers
concluded that cognitive style had a significant association with students’ academic achievement.
Bassey et.al. again cite research by Tinajero and Paramo (1997) who investigated the relationship between
cognitive styles and student achievement in several subject domains (English, mathematics, natural science,
social science, Spanish, and Galician). With the sample of 408 middle school students, the researchers asserted
that cognitive style was a significant source of variation in overall performance of students. That is, field independent
subjects outperformed their field dependent counterparts.
It has also been found that analytic cognitive style had significant effect on student’s achievement in
chemistry than relational and inferential styles. Independent subjects score higher than dependent ones in
English Achievement Test. Independent learners are those who can do extensive reading and writing on their
own and tend to depend less on teachers and other learners.
A field independent student can identify and manipulate the parts that comprise the whole, while the field
dependent student has difficulty identifying the various parts and needs additional input to manipulate them.
This is an extremely salient point to a second language learner, as most language curriculum requires a student
to be able to manipulate words in a sentence in various patterns and combinations. If a student cannot find the
patterns, they cannot manipulate the words as required, and frustration and lack of understanding are the
result.
Some other academic connections are as follows
•
•
•
FI attained higher mathematics achievement across grades (Vaidya & Chansky, 1980);
FIs scored better on music compare to FDs (King, 1983);
FI recalled significantly more from mathematical/scientific passages but FD recalled more from socially
oriented passages (Phifer, 1983);
(183)
International Peer-Reviewed Journal
RH, VOL. 3 JULY 2013
•
FIs recalled more structural and functional information (equipment parts) than FDs (Skaggs, Rocklin,
Dansereau, & Hall, 1990);
•
•
FIs achieved more on performance-based assessments than did FDs (Lu & Suen, 1995);
Most FI teachers gave FI students higher grades than FD students did; and most FD teachers assigned
the highest grades to FD students (James, 1973);
•
FI children learned mathematics better from a FD teacher than a FI teacher (Packer & Bain, 1978)
Impact of culture on cognition
A cultural perspective on cognition assumes that humans are not only prepared biologically with a
variety of physiological and psychological components but also with socially shaped propensities. Hence, the
human psychological profile is formed through biological, social, and cultural processes. This profile includes
particular ways of adaptation and adjustment to one’s socio-cultural environment. The socio-cultural shaping of
cognition may transpire in the production of action in particular ways in each culture. An assortment of interpersonal
and social factors in various cultures may be significant predictors of cognition.
Anthropological and psychological studies of general cognitive processes continue to suggest that
cognitive styles are connected to culture (Chen & Ford, 1998; Chen & Macredie, 2002; Lucy, 1992; Luria, 1976;
Nisbett, & Norenzayan, 2002; Nisbett, Peng, Choi, & Norenzayan, 2001; Riding & Rayner, 1998; Wood, Ford,
Miller, Sobczyk, & Duffin, 1996). As contextually influenced processes of learning develop over time, the mind
forms particular styles of planning, strategizing, and problem-solving based on inherent patterns of organized
information (Goldstein & Blackman, 1978).
This is particularly well illustrated by Nisbett and Norenzayan (2002), who found that “cultures differ
markedly in the sort of inferential procedures they typically use for a given problem” (p. 2). Reviewing a range
of studies dealing with linguistics and mathematics, they uncovered the variable differences in knowledge
domains, analytical processes, and learning skills (such as deductive rules and schemes for induction and
causal analysis) in diverse cultures, and showed how these processes operate on different inputs, for different
people, in different situations and cultures. For example, discussing Lucy’s study (1992) on how linguistic
differences in number marking patterns affect thought among the Yucatee Maya, Chinese, Japanese, and
English, Nisbett and Norenzayan (2002) state that, “consistent with the lexical structures of these two languages,
Yucatee speakers showed a preference for material-based classification, whereas English speakers showed a
preference for shape-based classification” (p. 8).
The results of some studies substantiate that cognitive differences at the design level exist in the form of
cultural styles that are perceptible to users. Awareness of cultural cognitive style is necessary for the improvement
of online communication.
Ethnicity was the strongest predictor of cognitive style in numerous studies. The cultural background of
an individual and the degree to which the individual endorses cultural values moderate activation in brain
networks engaged during even simple visual and attentional tasks. Behavioral research has shown that people
from Western cultural contexts perform better on tasks emphasizing independent (absolute) dimensions than
on tasks emphasizing interdependent (relative) dimensions, whereas the reverse is true for people from East
Asian context.
Whereas Japanese were more accurate in the relative task, Americans were more accurate in the absolute
task. Moreover, when engaging in another culture, individuals tended to show the cognitive characteristic
common in the host culture.
Cultural differences arise from culturally different viewing patterns when confronted with a naturalistic
scene. Measuring the eye movements of American and Chinese participants while they viewed photographs
with a focal object on a complex background, researchers found, the Americans fixated more on focal objects
than did the Chinese, and the Americans tended to look at the focal object more quickly. Thus, it appears that
differences in judgment and memory may have their origins in differences in what is actually attended as people
view a scene.
(184)
International Peer-Reviewed Journal
RH, VOL. 3 JULY 2013
Researchers examined holistic cognitive tendencies in attention, categorization, and reasoning in three
types of communities that belong to the same national, geographic, ethnic, and linguistic regions and yet vary
in their degree of social interdependence: farming, fishing, and herding communities in Turkey’s eastern Black
Sea region. As predicted, members of farming and fishing communities, which emphasize harmonious social
interdependence, exhibited greater holistic tendencies than members of herding communities, which emphasize
individual decision making and foster social independence. These findings have implications for how eco-
cultural factors may have lasting consequences on important aspects of cognition.
Other research suggests that (a) traditional East Asian art has predominantly context-inclusive styles,
whereas Western arthas predominantly object-focused styles, and (b) contemporarymembers of East Asian
and Western cultures maintain these culturallyshaped aesthetic orientations. The findings can be explainedby
the relation among attention, cultural resources, and aestheticpreference (Masuda,2008).
Culture and FD/I
A study analyzing the relationship between ethnic or other subgroup membership and the individual’s
cognitive style found that the Jewish subculture were more field dependent than the white Anglo-Saxon Protestant.
Clear difference could be found between the two typesof cultures; that is, U.S. and German (individualistic
cultures) participants were more field independent than were Russian and Malaysian (collectivist culture)
participants
Field dependence / Independence are associated with cultural variation. Witkin & Berry (1971) identified
four antecedents of Field dependence /Independence : ecology, social pressure, socialization and biological
effects. Ecological adaptation refers to the characteristic relationship between man and nature. Ecological
demands force members of a society to develop certain characteristics and perceptual abilities. For example
hunters need to locate food and return safely to their homes. Since they need to distinguish the stimuli from the
environment they are field independent.
Social pressure refers to social conformity and social stratification. In some societies such pressures are
few allowing self-control to operate. Field independent societies can be differentiated from field dependent
societies on the basis of family structure (nuclear vs. extended) social structure (egalitarian vs. hierarchical
stratified) and social relation patterns (reserved – fragmented vs. dependence integrated) Agriculturalists who
cultivate land and become permanent residents develop tighter relationships than hunters. They live in extended
families and develop interdependence. Child rearing style can be either person/status oriented or the growth
nurturing style which encourages field independence.
Finally, we can say, field dependence is characterized in cultures where adherence to authority and strict
socialization norms are common; field independence is characterized in cultures that encourage autonomy,
have more lenient child rearing practices and have loose social organization.
Psychological Differentiation
Field independence/field dependence deals with the amount of psychological differentiation experienced.
Differentiated systems are more complexly organized. The relationships between the system and the environment
are more elaborate. Witkin and Goodenough (1981) describe the differentiation process as one of the creation
of inner boundaries between the inner core of the self and the environment. Psychological activities also have
boundaries and are separated from each other and the environment.
Differentiation creates a hierarchical structure forming an articulated system. Field independence requires
a restructuring of the perceptual or psychological field and therefore is a more differentiated process. According
to Witkin and Goodenough (1981) field dependent learners are more socially oriented than field independent
learners. They pay more attention to social cues, they like to be with others and they seek learning and
vocational experiences that put them in contact with people. Field dependent children perform less well on
formal operations tasks than do field independent children, Brodzinsky (1985). Other researchers support this.
For example: children, according to Witkin and Goodenough (1981), are more field dependent than are adults.
There is a general movement toward field independence across development, but there are also great
individual differences. Those who develop more rapidly toward field independence also develop greater
(185)
International Peer-Reviewed Journal
RH, VOL. 3 JULY 2013
competence in cognitive restructuring. Interestingly evidence is presented (from primitive agricultural and nomadic
herding societies) which indicates that there is genetic selection of field independent subjects in primitive
settings and that more are field dependent as the culture grows and becomes more modern.
Conclusion
Based on the above researches, we can conclude that understanding the socio cultural background of
students is as important as understanding the subject one is teaching them. The kind of educational cues
provided, the nature of learning tasks and the structure of assessment and evaluation can all be modified to
ensure greater academic achievement of the students.
We must remember that although Indians are generally considered to be a collectivist culture, there are
individualistic cultures within this country. As Westernization entrenches itself further in our midst, the move
towards an individualistic and therefore field independent way of thought is become more common. With the
recent legislation allowing foreign universities to set up shop, we can look forward to an amazingly multi cultural
student population. Teaching in such a set up will definitely add to the existing challenge of teaching our own
multi-cultural population. Knowing how culture affects learning patterns will help us make teaching and learning
relevant, efficient and productive.
References
•
•
•
Bassey, S.W., Umoren, G. & Udida, L.A. (2007). Cognitive styles, secondary school students’Attitude
and academic performance in chemistry in Akwa Ibom state – Nigeria. From www.hbcse.tifr.res.in/episteme/
episteme-2/e-proceedings/bassey. Web.
Chen, S. Y., & Ford, N.J. (1998). Modelling user navigation behaviours in a hypermedia-based learning
system: An individual differences approach. International Journal of Knowledge Organization, 25 (3), 67–
7
8. Print.
Chen, S. Y., & Macredie, R. D. (2002). Cognitive styles and hypermedia navigation: Development of a
learning model. Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology, 53 (1), 3-15.
Print.
•
•
•
Chua, H. F., Boland, J. E., and Nisbett, R. E.(2005) From The Cover: Cultural variation in eye movements
during scene perception Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA August 30, 2005 102: 12629-12633. Print.
Cutler, M.S. (2010). Does Culture Affect Learning Style? Retrieved from gse.gmu.edu/assets/docs/lmtip/
vol3/M.Cutler.doc. Web.
D, Zachary. The name assigned to the document by the author. This field may also contain sub-titles,
series names, and report numbers.Influences of cultural patterns on the thinking of children in certain
ethnic groups, a study of the effect of Jewish sub-culture on the field-dependence-independence dimension
of cognition. From http:\\ERIC.ed.gov. Web.
•
•
Daniels, H. L. (1996). Interaction of cognitive style and learner control of presentation mode in a hypermedia
environment, retrieved on October 21, 2005 from: http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-
3132141279612241/. Web.
Faiola, A., and Matei, S. A. (2005). Cultural cognitive style and web design: Beyond a behavioral inquiry
into computer-mediated communication. Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication, 11(1), article
1
8. Print.
•
•
Goldstein, K. M., & Blackman, S. (1978). Cognitive Style. New York: Wiley. Print.
Gonzalez, R., Kwan, L. and Nisbett, R.E. (2008).Culture and Aesthetic Preference: Comparing the Attention
to Context of East Asians and Americans Personality Social Psychological Bulletin. 34: 1260-1275. Print.
•
•
Hedden, T., Ketay, S., Aron, A., Markus, H.R., Gabrieli, J.D.(2008).Psychological Science. Cultural
influences on neural substrates of attentional control.19(1):12-7. Print.
Jonassen, David H. & Grabowski, Barbara L. (1993). Handbook of Individual Difference, Learning, and
Instruction. Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Publishers. Print.
(186)
International Peer-Reviewed Journal
RH, VOL. 3 JULY 2013
•
•
•
•
•
•
King, D. W. (1983). Field-dependence/field-independence and achievement in music reading. Doctoral
Dissertation University of Wisconsin. Dissertation Abstracts International, 44, 1320. Print.
Kitayama, S., Duffy, S., Kawamura, T., & Larsen, J. T. (2003). Perceiving an object and its context in
different cultures: A cultural look at New Look. Psychological Science, 14, 201-206. Print,
Lu, C., & Suen, J. (1995). Assessment approaches and cognitive styles. Journal of Educational
Measurement, 32, 1-17. Print.
Lucy, J. A. (1992). Grammatical Categories and Cognition: A Case Study of the Linguistic Relativity
Hypothesis. Cambridge, New York: Cambridge University Press. Print.
Luria, A. R. (1976). Cognitive Development: Its Cultural and Social Foundations. Cambridge, MA: Harvard
University Press. Print.
Maghsudi, M. The Interaction Between Field Dependent / Independent Learning Styles and Learners’
rd
Linguality in Third Language Acquisition retrieved on April 3 2010 from salr.net/Documents/Mojtaba-
2
.pd. Print.
•
•
Masuda, T., Gonzalez, R., Kwan, L. and Nisbett, R.E. (2008). Culture and Aesthetic Preference: Comparing
the Attention to Context of East Asians and Americans Personality & Social Psychology Bulletin 34:
1260-1275. Print.
Nisbett, R. E., & Norenzayan, A. (2002). Culture and cognition. In H. Pashler & D. L. Medin (Eds.),
Stevens’ Handbook of Experimental Psychology: Vol. 2: Cognition (3rd ed., pp. 561-597). New York:
John Wiley & Sons. Print.
•
•
Nisbett, R. E., Peng, K., Choi, I., & Norenzayan, A. (2001). Culture and systems of thought: Holistic vs.
analytic cognition. Psychological Review, 8, 291-310. Print.
Phifer, J. (1983). Effects of individual cognitive style and processing differences on metacognitive reading
strategies. Doctoral Dissertation University of Nebraska. Dissertation Abstracts International, 44, 2420.
Print.
•
•
Riding, R., & Rayner, S. G. (1998). Cognitive Styles and Learning Strategies. London: David Fulton.
Print.
Skaggs, L. P., Rocklin, T., Dansereau, D., & Hall, R. H. (1990). Dyadic learning of technical material:
Individual differences, social interaction, and recall. Contemporary Educational Psychology, 15, 47-63.
Print.
•
•
Uskul, K. , Kitayama, S. and Nisbett, R.E. (2008). Ecocultural basis of cognition: Farmers and fishermen
are more holistic than herders Proc. National Academy of Science. USA. 105: 8552-8556 Print.
Vaidya, S., & Chansky, N. M. (1980). Cognitive development and cognitive style as factors in
mathematics achievement. Journal of Educational Psychology, 72, 326-330. Print.
•
Witkin, H.A., & Goodenough, D.R. (1981). Cognitive styles:Essence and origins. Madison,
CT: International Universities Press.http://jcmc.indiana.edu/vol11/issue1/faiola.html Personal
author, compiler, or editor name(s); click on any author to run a new search on that name.
Web.
•
•
Wood, F., Ford, N., Miller, D., Sobczyk, G., & Duffin, R. (1996). Information skills, searching
behaviour and cognitive styles for student-centered learning: A computer-assisted learning
approach. Journal of Information Science, 22 (2), 79–92. Print.
Zachary, D. (2010).The name assigned to the document by the author. This field may also
contain sub-titles, series names, and report numbers. Influences of cultural patterns on the
thinking of children in certain ethnic groups, a study of the effect of Jewish sub-culture on
the field-dependence-independence dimension of cognition. From http:\\ERIC.ed.gov . Web.
*
****
(187)