The Primacy Of Story
Because our minds are united by the story engram,
with which we think, dream, and hope,
the world of the human mind is one world
by Renée Fuller
One of the articles in The Learning Revolution (IC#27) Winter 1991, Page 26
Copyright (c)1991, 1996 by Context Institute
In an earlier issue of IN CONTEXT, Renée Fuller, creator of
the Ball-Stick-Bird reading system, wrote about astonishing achievements
in reading on the part of severely retarded students (IQ 20-50) - achievements
she herself did not believe possible ("Beyond IQ," IC#18). But
teaching these students to read did more than help them operate in a world
of letters and entertain themselves. It taught them to think. What's more,
it gave some of the capacity for metacognition - thinking about thinking.
Dr. Fuller, a phsyiological psychologist, has dug deeply into this
phenomenon and discovered what she believes to be the basic building block
of consciousness - the story engram. With direct ties to our evolutionary
development, the story engram underlies all our languages, scientific discoveries,
and descriptions of the world. Understanding its primacy in consciousness
- and observing its effect on the individual mind when called into action
from dormancy - is enough to erase many of the illusions of separateness
under which we labor. We are more alike than we know.
Here Renée Fuller tells the story of Bob, a retarded man who
developed rare wisdom, and the story of the story engram itself. Contact
her at Ball-Stick-Bird Publications, PO Box 592, Stony Brook, NY 11790.
There he was again, trying to catch my eye. But I didn't want my eye
caught. As Chief of Psychological Services at a large hospital and also
heavily involved in research, there just wasn't time to respond to every
retarded patient who wanted attention. But this time Bob was insistent.
He stepped in front of me, blocking the path into my office.
"You write de books. I know ... Vooroos." Then, gathering steam,
he repeated without hesitation "I know Vooroos." He looked at
me triumphantly. Seeing my puzzled look, his eyes became pleading. "Vooroos
... I know Vooroos ... Vooroos here." His gesture with both arms seemed
to indicate everywhere.
Finally I understood. "You mean the Vooroos are more than cartoons.
They are ..."
"People. I know..." Then pointing at me, "You know Vooroos."
I had to laugh. Bob was right. The Vooroos, characters in the books he was
learning to read with (and which I had written), were indeed all around
us. Amusing looking cartoons, the Vooroos are the proverbial bad guys who
get their kicks out of making others unhappy. Of course in my books the
bad guys always failed. That was the fun of it - good always triumphed.
And as Bob later explained to me, so it would at the hospital, even though
sometimes it looked as though the Vooroos had won.
That day, when Bob finally made me understand that he relished the concept
of allegory, was the beginning of a series of conversations between the
two of us. We talked about the latent, the hidden content of my books which
he understood so well, but which many of my staff had missed. In a way we
became friends.
At age 48, with a Stanford-Binet IQ of 48, Bob had been institutionalized
most of his life. The heavily-funded school at the institution had valiantly
tried to educate him, to no avail. After decades of intensive work, he still
did not know most of the alphabet. This total lack of academic success was
one of the reasons he had been chosen for the Ball-Stick-Bird research study.
The Ball-Stick-Bird reading system, intended for superior dyslexic students,
was not supposed to be effective with the retarded. Nevertheless, some of
my staff had insisted that we try it out on a retarded population anyway.
Bob was one of their first students, and his success was immediate. After
48 years of failure, Bob learned to read! And he understood what
he was reading! But something more important had happened, and Bob was desperately
trying to tell me about it with his steadily increasing vocabulary and ability
to communicate.
Bob was understanding things about life that he hadn't even been aware
of before. Mimicking the idea-unit technique of Ball-Stick-Bird, he built
the concepts he was trying to understand and communicate by carefully choosing
the appropriate noun and then its action verb. As he became more adept,
he added adjectives and adverbs to the noun/action-verb complex. In this
way he was gradually able to develop and express a philosophy of life
not only to others, but to himself.
Two more years passed. Bob, being a decade further along in life than
I, began to understand things that were still out of my reach. He had witnessed
a great deal of violence in his life. What he was able to verbalize, with
the cognitive changes that came with the later books in the Ball-Stick-Bird
series, was that violence never really paid. It damaged not only the victims,
but the perpetrators. Bob thought about the horrendous price the
perpetrators had to pay, and he felt tremendous sadness. He believed that
punishment - and revenge - simply did not work, and that other ways must
be found to change people. And he had seen all this in my books - in itself
an astonishing achievement, since that element of the stories had somehow
escaped the attention of my high-IQ staff!
But curiously, my response to his increasing maturity was not always
as generous with delight as I would have expected. Only now, many years
later, do I realize what I missed.
The riches of our minds reflect who we are. They are our identity. It
is not as easy to be generous about what our minds own as it is about material
goods. Generous people are willing to share economic wealth, but the wealth
of our minds we call our own, for it determines our ultimate status. By
first grade, children frequently know where in the intellectual pecking
order they belong. The tests tell them, and their parents, exactly what
to expect. That Bob, a middle-aged retarded man, and I were having philosophical
conversations was unexpected, and surprisingly hard to accept, even though
I myself had helped create these changes.
It was easier to accept the teenager Andy, who also used idea units to
build bigger stories, line by line. Andy, with his abnormal EEG, IQ of 51,
and impaired psychomotor ability, was the son of two institutionalized retardates.
His placement in foster care had ended in abuse and he was returned to the
institution. Again, the institution's school had tried a myriad of technologies
and approaches. The Ph.D.-level vice principal had spent a year on a one-to-one
basis trying to teach Andy to read. At the end of the year he still could
not recognize most of the letters of the alphabet. A year after our intervention,
Andy laboriously wrote out what he wanted to communicate using idea units
because "it help you think." His acting out dropped off sharply,
and a generous, thoughtful child emerged.
STORY AND THINKING
What was it that had happened to these two retarded people, and to the
other 24 of the original study, and the thousands since, who not only learned
to read but also learned to think? Why were there such dramatic personality
changes which accompanied the growth in cognition? Bob and Andy gave us
a clue when they mimicked the layout in idea units and the developmental
linguistics of the reading system. They did so not only in their writing,
but also in their talking.
Originally I had incorporated developmental linguistics into the Ball-Stick-Bird
reading system to make story reading easier for the beginning student. Recapitulating
the language development of the child, the first books of the series are
composed primarily with nouns and their action verbs. Gradually adjectives
and adverbs are added. This is one of the B-S-B techniques that, as we were
to find out, made it easy for normal four-year-olds, the dyslexic, even
the severely retarded to learn to read with comprehension. But these techniques
also inadvertently demonstrated, and thereby taught, how a miniature story
(an idea unit which is highlighted by the B-S-B layout) can be used to build
bigger and bigger stories.
The first words of children the world over are almost invariably nouns.
These nouns, if the parent knows the context, frequently imply a miniature
story. Within a few more months the nouns gain their action verb, and now
the miniature story is more readily understood by outsiders. Shortly thereafter
adjectives, then adverbs appear describing the nouns and the verbs. The
connectives and articles appear later still. Last in child development come
the prepositions, some of which are not mastered until teenage years. This
is the progression by which children learn to communicate. The B-S-B teaching
system, by following this natural progression, speeded up and enhanced normal
cognitive development. In the case of the retarded, it sometimes made possible
an approximation to normal development that was completely unexpected. We
have repeatedly seen how B-S-B intervention, regardless at what age, IQ,
or learning disability, triggers an astonishing intellectual explosion.
But why did the building of stories in this way trigger such extraordinary
cognitive development? Had the teaching system inadvertently tapped a fundamental
building block of human cognitive organization? I think it reached something
so fundamental in cognitive organization that even with his/her first nouns
the human child is already using this building block. It is the miniature
story which the parent, knowing the context, understands. I call it the
story engram. As the child progresses from nouns to verbs, this story
engram develops in power and becomes the building block with which we humans
do our thinking. Our thoughts, even the most obtuse, take the story form.
And by being shown how this cognitive building block is structured - how
it is used to build bigger stories - the human mind is able to do what it
does naturally on a level that surpasses any previous achievements or expectations.
THE STORY OF STORY
How did this story engram come into being? Tracing the noun-action-verb
ontogeny of the story engram is a fragmented but fascinating story of its
own. We know that insects can communicate complicated bits of information.
For example, bees can tell the other bees of their hive the location of
choice pollen. However, such information processing bears little resemblance
to the capacities of mammals with their versatility and flexibility.
The story engram appears to be a novel evolutionary development of the
Class Mammalia. Most of us know dogs who recognize a dozen nouns, half a
dozen verbs, and several adjectives. For example, the communications "good
dog," "fetch ball," are not unusual. Both communications
are simple story engrams - the building blocks with which human mammals
tell bigger and bigger stories. Researchers found that wild vervet monkeys
produce different sounds for different predators (nouns), which require
different responses (verbs). Here is the story engram in its noun/action-verb
ontogeny. With this kind of etiology we can see why causal relationships
are so fundamental to human thinking. As with much of physiology and morphology,
the evolutionary development of the story engram in mammals is similar to
the progression seen in the developing child. Ontogeny recapitulates phylogeny.
Having its roots in early mammalian evolution probably explains why the
story engram is so overrepresented in the human brain. Even our badly brain-damaged
students were able to call on this capacity. Every human culture talks with
the engram, thinks with it, and uses it as a building block to produce bigger
and bigger stories. It is the universal trademark of the human brain that
it spends much of its waking life listening to, telling, and thinking up
stories. It is also why all humans have languages, and why all these languages
have a similar grammatical structure. Sharing the noun/action-verb ontogeny,
all human languages have nouns, and adjectives that describe these nouns;
verbs, and adverbs that describe the verbs and adjectives. Having such similar
grammatical structures, the stories of one language can readily be translated
into another.
The history of the story engram has made all humans surprisingly alike
in the stories they tell and listen to. It has also made what I call engram
logic possible. We use story engrams as book titles, movie titles, headlines
in newspapers, chapter headings, and when we say something "in a nutshell."
Story engrams can also become scientific constructs, which we try to validate.
My description in this article of "the story engram" is itself
such an example. And because the story engram with which bigger and bigger
stories are built is so basic to our cognitive evolution, to our human way
of thinking, children from stone-age tribes can become college professors
or scientists in one generation - even if we denigrate the accomplishment
with "After all, he was the son of a chief."
For just as I found it difficult to share my intellectual status with
Bob, so other intellectually wealthy individuals, or groups, or even nations,
find it difficult to let go of their intellectual superiority. The curse
of the IQ tests or SAT scores hangs over all our children; and the label
"superior," or "average," or "developmentally delayed"
has reached down to the nursery schools. Yet retarded Bob and I, two middle-aged
humans, had more in common intellectually than some of my younger staff
and I. However, that was after intervention - after Bob had learned how
the story engram is constructed, and how to build the wonderful edifices
of the human mind with it.
Now, many years later, I realize how much Bob has enriched my life. His
views on pacifism haunt me still. How many Bobs are there who could enrich
all our lives? How many "average" or "developmentally delayed"
children are there who could be taught what the story engram can build,
and as a result think deep thoughts and make a difference in many lives?
All human children can have wings so their minds will soar to worlds as
yet unknown. And one of the things they will discover is that the world
of the human mind is one world..
Discovering The Story Engram
by Renée Fuller
Extracted and condensed from "Teaching With The Story Engram,"
a scientific paper presented at the 98th Convention of the American Psychological
Association, Boston, 1990.
The Ball-Stick-Bird reading system derives its name from the way it highlights
alphabet configurations. The student is shown how all the letters can be
built with three basic forms: a circle, a line, and an angle. These three
color-coded shapes are so basic to the human nervous system that a newborn
can recognize them. Even an octopus can be trained to respond to them.
By building the letters with the three forms while giving their most
usual sound, four sense modalities are tapped instead of the usual two.
Further, the three basic forms highlight those parts of a letter that differentiate
it from other letters, and clarify which aspects of a letter are pertinent
and which are merely "doohickeys."
Story reading, however, does not wait for alphabet mastery. The strategy
is to get to contextual reading as rapidly as possible. To achieve this,
initial memory load is reduced - beginning reading is taught with capitals,
which have the additional advantage of avoiding letter reversals since in
B-S-B letter building, the big stick is always first (to the left).
Also letters are known by their most usual sound, rather than by their alphabet
names, again reducing the initial memory load.
Already with the presentation of the second letter, word building begins.
With the presentation of the fourth letter, the first science fiction story
starts.
But what exactly is a story, and how does it come into being? Examination
of the stories and letters written by our beginning readers furnished a
curious clue. Line by careful line, these written communications were built
with idea units - nouns plus action verbs - in the style of the B-S-B
teaching system. I realized that the idea unit, which is actually a miniature
story, was the fundamental unit of cognitive organization that had been
tapped by the B-S-B system - the story engram.
The story engram as the fundamental unit of information processing is
not the only way information storage and processing could have evolved.
An example of a very different way is that of bees - their cognitive organization
is highly efficient, requiring the investment of only a tiny nervous system.
In contrast, the mammalian brain is an exceedingly expensive energy investment.
And it becomes progressively more energy expensive as one goes up the phylogenetic
scale.
Gauging from the degree to which which we have overpopulated this planet,
this energy expensive brain had a revolutionary advantage - the story engram.
It allows us to draw swift conclusions about complicated interlocking stimuli.
The story engram, with its capacity for story elaboration, allows not only
for a phenomenal increase in memory storage and retrieval, but more information
can be processed and retrieved per unit of time.
But the story engram does more. By imposing a structure on reality, it
determines how we humans perceive our world. The cause-and-effect relationships,
the either/or phenomena, the dichotomies, and the explanations are all imposed
by an engram that derives its structure from the noun/action-verb ontogeny,
which made rapid decisions and communication possible. This story engram
structure determines the nature of human logic - and the lack of it.
Please support
this web site ... and thanks if you already are!
All contents copyright (c)1991,
1996 by Context Institute
Please send comments to webmaster
Last Updated 29 June 2000.
URL: http://www.context.org/ICLIB/IC27/Fuller.htm
Home | Search
| Index of Issues | Table
of Contents
|