期刊目錄列表 - 71卷(2026) - 【教育科學研究期刊】71(1)三月刊(本期專題:多元視角詮釋 J. Bruner 跨科際的教育科學研究之傳承)

(專題)以「人」之研究成「人」之教育─J. Bruner人的研究(MACOS)之教育意涵與啟示
作者:
鹽城幼兒師範高等專科學校楊恩慧、國立政治大學教育學院朱遠雪

卷期:71卷第1期
日期:2026年3月
頁碼:37-66
DOI:https://doi.org/10.6209/JORIES.202603_71(1).0002

摘要:

  作為當代最具影響力的教育思想家之一,J. Bruner對美國乃至世界教育領域的重大貢獻,不只體現在他對「人」的研究上,更體現在其以「人」之研究促「人」之發展的教育構念與行動上。本研究以Bruner主持開發的「人的研究」(Man: A Course of Study, MACOS)課程為研究對象,採用歷史分析與文獻分析相結合之方法,系統性地考察該課程的發起背景、課程設計、課堂實踐、教學成效及結局等內容。研究發現,MACOS以結構主義認知理論為框架,創造性地整合人類學、心理學、進化生物學等多學科知識,透過螺旋式課程與發現學習法,構建出以「人性本質探究」為核心的社會科課程新模式。課程應用影片、遊戲等創新教學技術,將技術定位為文化理解的「稜鏡」和認知發展的「鷹架」,開創出獨特的教育實踐模式。MACOS雖因政治文化等內外因素影響而被迫終止,但其所秉持的教育理念、所開創的課程結構與內容模式、所主張的教學方法與技術、所開發的課程資源及其所傳達的教育革新之精神等,對於當前數位化轉型背景下的教育創新仍具重要參照意義,包括教育本質的重審、知識維度的突破、價值立場的堅守、方法層面的創新、協同機制的建立。

關鍵詞:Bruner、人的研究、社會科課程、教育改革、認知理論

《詳全文》 檔名

參考文獻:
巴戰龍(2017)。布魯納和「人類:一門研究課程」。中國民族教育,12,16。https://doi. org/10.16855/j.cnki.zgmzjy.2017.12.011
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【Xu, S.-S.(2012). Social studies curriculum reform in elementary schools: A case study of Man: A course of study directed by Jerome Bruner [Unpublished master’s thesis]. Minzu University of China.】
常永才、李英源、謝丹、徐珊珊(2016)。科學取向的社會科課程革新:布魯納主持《人類研究課程》分析。教育學術月刊,05,88-96。https://doi.org/10.16477/j.cnki.issn1674-2311.2016. 05.013
【Chang, Y.-C., Li, Y.-Y., Xie, D., & Xu, S.-S. (2016). Science-oriented reform of social studies curriculum: Analysis of Bruner’s Man: A course of study. Education Research Monthly, 05, 88-96. https://doi.org/10.16477/j.cnki. issn1674-2311.2016.05.013】
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中文APA引文格式
楊恩慧、朱遠雪(2026)。以「人」之研究成「人」之教育─J. Bruner人的研究(MACOS)之教育意涵與啟示教育科學研究期刊,71(1),37-66。
https://doi.org/10.6209/JORIES.202603_71(1).0002
APA Format
Yang, E.-H., & Zhu, Y.-X. (2026). From the Study of Man to the Education of Man: The Educational Significance and Implications of Bruner’s MACOS Curriculum. Journal of Research in Education Sciences, 71(1), 37-66.
 https://doi.org/10.6209/JORIES.202603_71(1).0002

Journal directory listing - Volume 71 (2026) - Journal of Research in Education Sciences【71(1)】March (Special Issue: Multi-perspective Interpretations of J. Bruner Interdisciplinary Legacy in Educational Science)

(Special Issue) From the Study of Man to the Education of Man: The Educational Significance and Implications of Bruner’s MACOS Curriculum
Author:
Enhui Yang (Yancheng Kindergarten Teacher College), Yuanxue Zhu (College of Education, National Chengchi University)

Vol.&No.:Vol. 71, No. 1
Date:March 2026
Pages:37-66
DOI:https://doi.org/10.6209/JORIES.202603_71(1).0002

Abstract:

  This study undertakes an in-depth examination of “Man: A Course of Study” (MACOS), a curriculum developed under the leadership of contemporary educational thinker Jerome Bruner, systematically investigating its core educational philosophy, curriculum structure, pedagogical practices, and profound implications for contemporary educational reform. As an exemplary curriculum of the 1960s “New Social Studies Movement” in the United States, MACOS was grounded in structuralist cognitive theory and creatively integrated multidisciplinary knowledge from anthropology, psychology, and evolutionary biology, with the aim of guiding students in social science learning centered on “the exploration of human nature.”
Research Background and Motivation
  While Bruner’s contributions to educational theory and practice are widely recognized, systematic scholarly research on MACOS remains inadequate. Existing literature tends either to emphasize historical background descriptions or to focus on technical analyses of curriculum models, without deeply examining how MACOS systematically transformed theoretical research on “humanity” into human-centered educational practice. Notably, there is insufficient exploration of how MACOS, based on the study of “humanity,” systematically constructed the holistic operational logic integrating curriculum objectives, content, methods, and evaluation. This research gap underscores the necessity of re-examining MACOS to comprehensively present its integrated framework connecting educational philosophy, curriculum design, and pedagogical practice.
Research Objectives
  This study aims to systematically elucidate how MACOS promotes children’s cognitive development, cultural understanding, and ethical reasoning through its interdisciplinary curriculum content, spiral curriculum organization, and discovery learning pedagogical strategies. Concurrently, this study seeks to critically reflect– within its historical context– on the internal and external challenges and structural limitations that MACOS encountered during implementation, thereby extracting its significant implications for contemporary educational innovation in the digital era.
Literature Review
  A review of relevant literature reveals that previous research has predominantly approached MACOS from the perspectives of curriculum development history or Bruner’s personal academic trajectory, with limited attention to the curriculum philosophy centered on “human nature inquiry” and its epistemological foundations. While some scholars have astutely identified its scientific inquiry characteristics, they have relatively underemphasized Bruner’s core commitment to humanistic values. Other researchers have focused on comparisons with objectives-based models, yet discussions of MACOS’s pioneering contributions to multicultural education and values education remain underdeveloped. Furthermore, MACOS’s innovative approach to instructional technology– positioning films, games, and other media as “prisms” for cultural understanding and “scaffolding” for cognitive development– this pedagogically sophisticated technological perspective has not received adequate scholarly attention and evaluation.
Research Methods
  To achieve the research objectives, this study employs a combined approach of historical analysis and document analysis. Historical analysis traces the development of MACOS within the evolving social, cultural, and educational landscape of the United States from the 1950s to 1970s, while examining Bruner’s intellectual biography to understand both the external conditions and internal logic shaping his curriculum philosophy. Document analysis involves in-depth interpretation of Bruner’s original writings, the MACOS curriculum materials, and significant critical literature. Through interpretation and synthesis of qualitative data, the study extracts core educational meanings and conducts critical reflection.
Research Findings
  The principal findings of this study are as follows:
  (1) A curriculum framework centered on human nature inquiry: MACOS constructed a curriculum guiding students toward a comprehensive understanding of the human condition, structured around three core questions: “What is human nature?”, “How is human nature formed?”, and “How can humans develop their humanity more fully?” The content transcends traditional disciplinary boundaries in history and geography. Through comparative studies of salmon, herring gulls, baboons, and Inuit Eskimos, students explore the essence of humanity through the interplay of biological and cultural dimensions.
  (2) Discovery learning and technology as cognitive scaffolding: Pedagogically, MACOS emphasizes “discovery learning,” guiding students to construct knowledge autonomously through strategies including comparison, inference, participation, and metacognitive activation. Particularly noteworthy is its forward-thinking application of instructional technology: films, games, and other media function not merely as vehicles for knowledge transmission, but as “prisms” for stimulating cultural reflection and “scaffolding” for supporting cognitive construction, thereby pioneering a distinctive paradigm for deeply integrating technology into humanistic education.
  (3) Empirically validated teaching and learning outcomes: Multiple empirical studies demonstrate that MACOS implementation effectively promotes teacher pedagogical reflection, fostering shifts toward more student-centered teaching approaches and encouraging adoption of diverse assessment methods. For students, MACOS not only enhances learning motivation and positive attitudes toward social studies, but also cultivates cross-cultural understanding and critical thinking skills, with demonstrable positive effects in reducing achievement gaps among students from diverse backgrounds.
  (4) Underlying causes of curriculum termination and sociological implications: MACOS ultimately ceased due to external political and cultural conflicts, prohibitively high implementation costs, and lack of vertical articulation with schools’ overall curriculum systems. This outcome profoundly illustrates that educational reform success depends not solely on curriculum design quality, but is inextricably linked to social and cultural contexts, political ideologies, and institutional structures. From an educational sociology perspective, the trajectory of MACOS exemplifies the nature of curriculum as a “cultural politics” text, wherein content selection and organization inevitably engage with contestations over values and power.
Discussion and Implications
  Despite MACOS’s incomplete realization due to historical constraints, the educational philosophy it embodied and the curriculum model it pioneered retain profound relevance for contemporary educational contexts confronting digital transformation and value pluralism. In summary, its implications encompass:
  (1) Re-examining educational essence: Education must refocus on “human development,” transcending mere knowledge transmission and skills training to prioritize holistic human flourishing.
  (2) Advancing knowledge integration: Through interdisciplinary integration and structural understanding, educators should help students construct coherent worldviews to counter knowledge fragmentation.
  (3) Upholding value commitments: Curricula should cultivate students’ multicultural perspectives and critical capacity for value judgment, preventing reproduction of cultural hegemony.
  (4) Innovating pedagogical approaches: In the technological age, technology should serve as a medium for deepening humanistic inquiry and scaffolding cognitive development, rather than constituting an educational end in itself.
  (5) Building collaborative infrastructures: Educational innovation must acknowledge schools as social systems and establish collaborative ecosystems supporting teacher professional development and effective curriculum implementation.
  The historical experience of MACOS reminds us that meaningful educational transformation requires seeking dynamic and dialectical equilibrium among theoretical construction and classroom practice, educational ideals and social realities, technological affordances and humanistic foundations, and individual development and social structures.

Keywords:Bruner, Man: A Course of Study (MACOS), social studies curriculum, education reform, cognitive theory