Learning pyramid

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The learning pyramid (also known as “the cone of learning”, “the learning cone”, “the cone of retention”, “the pyramid of learning”, or “the pyramid of retention”)[1] is a group of ineffective[2] learning models and representations relating different degrees of retention induced from various type of learning.

Description[edit]

The earliest such representation is believed to originate in a 1954 book called Audio-Visual Methods in Teaching.[1] A pyramid model was supposedly developed by the National Training Laboratories Institute in the early 1960s, on its main campus in Bethel, Maine, for which the original, internal research is said to have been lost.[1] Despite this, NTL's learning pyramid model became a central representation of this concept with a large number of models drawing from it. NTL's model generally used the following divisions:[1]

Learning Pyramid or Cone of Learning
Retention rate Learning activity before test of knowledge
90% Teach someone else/use immediately.
75% Practice what one learned.
50% Engage in a group discussion.
30% Watch a demonstration.
20% Watch audiovisual.
10% Read.
5% Listen to a lecture.

Criticisms[edit]

Criticism emerged on early versions of the model such as Edgar Dale's Cone of Experience.[3][4][5] Critics reported inconsistencies between the pyramid of learning and research.[1] The NTL learning pyramid study being lost, the field largely stands on an unknown methodology of unknown quality, with unknown mitigation of influential parameters such as time, population tested, etc., making the original study's results untrustworthy.[1]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e f Letrud, Kåre (2012), "A rebuttal of NTL Institute's learning pyramid", Education (133): 117–124
  2. ^ Masters, Ken (2020). "Edgar Dale's Pyramid of Learning in medical education: Further expansion of the myth". Medical Education. 54 (1): 22–32. doi:10.1111/medu.13813. ISSN 1365-2923. PMID 31576610. S2CID 203640807.
  3. ^ Subramony, D.P. (2003). “Dale’s Cone revisited: Critically examining the misapplication of a nebulous theory to guide practice”. Educational technology, 7-8, (25-30).
  4. ^ Molenda, M. (2004). “Cone of experience. In A. Kovalchik & K. Dawson (Eds.), Education and Technology (161-165). California: ABCCLIO.
  5. ^ Lalley, J. P. & Miller, R.H. (2007): “The learning pyramid: Does it point teachers in the right direction?” Education 128(1):64-79.