holist
English
Adjective
holist (not comparable)
- (education, of a learning strategy) That concentrates on forming an overview of the topic.
- 2000, Francis M. Quinn, The Principles and Practice of Nurse Education, page 34:
- Pask suggests that these strategies reflect basic learning styles; holist strategies reflect a comprehension learning style and serialist strategies an operation learning style.
- 2012, David H. Jonassen, Barbara L. Grabowski, Handbook of Individual Differences Learning and Instruction, page 209:
- The serialist/holist cognitive style is a measure of a bipolar information-processing strategy that describes the way that learners select and represent information (Pask, 1976; Pask & Scott, 1972).
Coordinate terms
- (education): serialist
Noun
holist (plural holists)
- A believer in, or practitioner of, holism; one who believes that a topic of study cannot be fully understood by studying the parts, or who studies by considering the whole.
- (sociology) One who advocates studying society as a whole, and who consistently interprets the actions of individuals in that context.
- 1991, Jack Snyder, “5: Science and Sovietology: Bridging the Methods Gap in Soviet Foreign Policy Studies”, in Erik P. Hoffmann, Robbin Frederick Laird, Frederic J. Fleron, editors, Soviet Foreign Policy, published 2009, page 132:
- Holism is more eclectic in its methods; for most holists, rigor means reconstructing the meaning of an action in the subject's own terms, and interpreting it in light of a richly detailed cultural, social, and historical context.
- 2006, Mario Bunge, “1: A systemic perspective on crime”, in Per-Olof H. Wikström, Robert J. Sampson, editors, The Explanation of Crime: Context, Mechanisms and Development, page 9:
- By contrast, the holists, like Emile Durkheim, regard individual action as only a reaction to pressures exerted by society as a whole: they are right in stressing the social embeddedness of individual action.
- (education) One who prefers to learn by forming an overview of the topic.
- 2012, David H. Jonassen, Barbara L. Grabowski, Handbook of Individual Differences Learning and Instruction, page 209:
- Holists use a global, thematic approach to learning by concentrating first on building broad descriptions. […] The holist then uses complex links to relate mutileveled information.
Coordinate terms
- (believer in or practitioner of holism): reductionist
- (education): serialist
Translations
See also
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