Learning to Use ALV (a Learners’ View)

Learning to Use ALV (a Learners’ View)

A Learners’ View (ALV) Is Of Choices On The Shortest And Fastest Path To Learning, The Oxygen Of Social Life.


Main Page: Narratives of a Learners’ View

Theme: People use ALV while learning, including to use symbols as in talking and reading.

PEOPLE USE ALV (a learners’ view) of learning consistently in and out of school. ALV bridges what one person does that results in other people changing what they do. People begin using ALV as infants, if not before birth. Educators and other instructors use ALV when someone does as instructed.

Learning as Choosing

This bridge shows people how to make choices that other people accept. People use ALV to learn how to walk, read, use symbols, concepts, and whatever else they learn to do. Parents and educators use ALV when they instruct lessons people learn. At the same time, people communicate through symbols.

A fundamental difference exists between ALV and symbols. ALV refers to observable choices people make while learning. Symbols and concepts refer to non-observable abstractions based in theories, common use, etc. People use ALV to learn to use symbols as other people use them.

ALV is an acronym for the descriptor a learners’ view. ALV and a learners’ view represent choices experimental scientists have reported that people make while learning something, such as a concepts and their symbol.

Last Edited: June 25, 2016