|


















































Massage Therapy Clinical Therapist
Telecom Products Sales Executive
ASP Support Client Services
Inquiry Center CRM Specialist
Call Center Design Engineer
Help Desk Desktop Support
Call Center Client Communications
Hospitality Reservations Manager
Sales Special Orders
Retail Commercial Ast Manager Or Read:
Resume
Customer Centricity
Ethics
Telecom 101 |
Assimilation and Accommodation
Assimilation and Accommodation are the two complementary
processes of Adaptation described by
Piaget, through
which awareness of the outside world is internalised. Although one
may predominate at any one moment, they are inseparable and exist in
a dialectical relationship. The terms are also used to
describe forms of knowledge in
Kolb’s
elaboration of the cycle of experiential learning.In Assimilation, what is perceived in the outside world is
incorporated into the internal world (note that I am not using
Piagetian terminology), without changing the structure of that
internal world, but potentially at the cost of "squeezing" the
external perceptions to fit — hence pigeon-holing and stereotyping.
If you are familiar with databases, you can think of it this way:
your mind has its database already built, with its fields and
categories already defined. If it comes across new information which
fits into those fields, it can assimilate it without any trouble.
In Accommodation, the internal world has to accommodate
itself to the evidence with which it is confronted and thus adapt to
it, which can be a more difficult and painful process. In the
database analogy, it is like what happens when you try to put in
information which does not fit the pre-existent fields and
categories. You have to develop new ones to accommodate the new
information.
In reality, both are going on at the same time, so that—just as the
mower blade cuts the grass, the grass gradually blunts the
blade—although most of the time we are assimilating familiar
material in the world around us, nevertheless, our minds are also
having to adjust to accommodate it. Original content
updated and hosted at www.learningandteaching.info/learning/ |
|