Four reasons to teach the hero's journey
The Hero's Journey
as a Learning Schema
by Reg Harris
Copyright © 2009 by Reg Harris. All rights reserved. Apart from properly cited quotes and short excerpts, no part of this article can be copied or used in any form without written permission from the author. For permission to use, please contact me. MLA/APA citation information provided at the at bottom of the page.
One of the most
important models for learning to emerge in recent decades is
schema theory. Schema theory proposes that humans process experience
by encoding it in mental structures called schemas. Schemas are
generic, abstract frameworks that do not
so much store the details
of experience, but help us organize those details to make experience
coherent and meaningful. Because of their critical role in
remembering information, building meaning, and shaping our life
views, schemas― and the hero's journey schema in particular―offer
teachers a valuable instructional tool.
Schemas and Learning
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The Journey Schema
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In schema
theory, acquiring, modifying
and deepening schemas are the essence
of growth and learning.
The journey
schema's central role in our lives makes it a valuable resource for
teachers. By the time children start school, they have experienced
the basic journey process both personally and through the stories
they’ve encountered. This familiarity
gives teachers a starting
point, a schema that can be activated and elaborated with formal
instruction on the journey. Then, when students have mastered the
journey’s stages and relationships, they will have a tool for using
what they know to understand what they don't know. In addition,
because schemas help us organize, store and use memories, the
journey schema will help students remember stories more thoroughly
and recall details more accurately. Finally, the journey's stages
contain archetypal relationships (i.e., relationships in a symbolic,
generic form). By understanding these relationships and applying
them to the stories they study, students can use the journey schema
as an aid to interpretation, inference and analysis.
Using the journey schema in
the classroom
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Schema theory
has important implications
in the classroom. It suggests that much of our teaching is mentoring
students through the task of enriching, adapting or building
schemas. The hero’s journey can be a very powerful and flexible aid in
this process.
With the
hero's journey as their foundation schema, our students can better
understand, interpret, and analyze the literature they study. They
can use the journey's vocabulary and generic structure as guides for discussion and
writing. They can use the relationships within the pattern
as points of comparison between different pieces
of literature.
Finally, they can use the journey schema as a bridge
to connect the
themes and lessons in literature to the experiences and struggles in
their lives.
Once they
make that leap, from literary themes to real-life possibilities, our
students will discover that the stories they read can enrich the
stories they live. Literature and film can awaken potentials for growth and
self-discovery in their own journeys. That is the real value of
teaching the journey as a learning schema.
Review: the journey schema's four strengths
REASON ONE: The Heroic Journey provides a scaffolding or framework to improve comprehension and understanding.
- The Journey framework gives students a powerful, narrative framework with which they can understand virtually any story (literature, film and their own lives).
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The Journey framework provides "ready-made" connections between story elements that can help students assimilate, process and use the new information.
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The Journey framework provides all of the elements of a story so that it can be used to fill in gaps in a new story, aiding comprehension and understanding.
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The Journey framework provides a virtually limitless potential for creating materials to activate, broaden or deepen current schemata (i.e., advance and graphic organizers) and a template to help students build new schema.
REASON TWO: The Heroic Journey can serve as a bridge to help students use what they do know to understand what they don't know.
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The Journey can help students transfer information from a known situation to a new situation (i.e., from stories they know to stories or life experiences that are new).
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The Journey can provide students with a framework of understanding that can guide their actions in a new situation, enabling them to respond more quickly, effectively and creatively.
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The Journey creates bridge for connecting the themes and lessons of literature to the students' own lives, opening new ways of seeing and being.
REASON THREE: The Heroic Journey schema can boost memory and recall.
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The Journey provides a framework to which students can attach the details of the new story.
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The Journey provides the cues to help students recall details they have stored.
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The Journey provides a framework to help students "chunk" new information so that it can be stored and remembered more effectively.
REASON FOUR: The Journey schema can boost students' performance on many processes related to reading and analyzing literature.
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The Journey provides a framework for comparing or contrasting elements within a story or across different stories.
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The Journey provides a framework for writing about characters, the challenges they face in the story and their motivations for action.
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The Journey provides a wealth of potential topics for analysis and discussion as each stage contains its own tasks, characteristics, and dangers.
(Posted: April 23, 2009, revised May 23, 2009)
Click here to explore our guide to teaching the hero's journey.
APA Citation:
Harris, R. (2009). The hero's journey as learning schema. Harris Communications: Educational home of the hero's journey. Retrieved (insert date), from http://www.yourheroicjourney.com/ReadingRoom/Schema and the Journey.htm.
MLA Citation:
Harris, Reg. "Hero's journey as schema theory". Harris Communications: Educational Home of the Hero's Journey. April 20, 2009. <http://www.yourheroicjourney.com/Reading Room/ArticlesEssays/Schema and the Journey.htm>

