On This Page:ToggleCharacteristicsExamplesTypesHow Schemas ChangeHow Schemas Affect LearningCritical EvaluationApplications
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Key TakeawaysA schema is a knowledge structure that allows organisms to interpret and understand the world around them. Schemata is a method of organizing information that allows the brain to work more efficiently.Piaget’s theory of cognitive developmentput the concept at the forefront of cognitive science. Contemporary conceptions of schema evolved in the 1970s and 1980s.The widespread use of computers in the last decades of the 20th century also affected theories of how people store and use information in the brain.There are four main types of schemas. These are centered around objects, the self, roles, and events.Schemas can be changed and reconstructed throughout a person’s life. The two processes for doing so are assimilation and accommodation.Schemas have been pivotal in influencing theories of learning as well as in teacher instruction methods.
Key Takeaways
Historical Background
Schema theory is a branch ofcognitive scienceconcerned with how the brain structures knowledge. Schema (plural: schemas or schemata) is an organized unit of knowledge for a subject or event based on past experience.
Individuals access schema to guide current understanding and action (Pankin, 2013). For example, a student’s self-schema of being intelligent may have formed due to past experiences of teachers praising the student’s work and influencing the student to have studious habits.
Information that does not fit into the schema may be comprehended incorrectly or even not at all.
For example, if a waiter at a restaurant asked a customer if he would like to hum with his omelet, the patron may have a difficult time interpreting what he was asking and why, as humming is not typically something that patrons in restaurants do with omelets (Widmayer, 2001).
The concept of a schema can be traced to Plato and Aristotle (Marshall, 1995); nonetheless, scholars consider Kant (1929) to be the first to talk about schemas as organizing structures that people use to mediate how they see and interpret the world (Johnson, 1987).
F.C. Bartlett, in his bookRemembering(1932), was the first to write extensively about schemas in the context of procedural memory.
Procedural memoryis a part of long-term memory responsible for organisms knowing how to control their bodies in certain ways in order to accomplish certain tasks, also known as motor skills.
The Swiss psychologistJean Piaget, best known for his work on child development, was the first to create a cognitive development theory that included schemas.
However, new information that cannot be integrated into an organism’s current schemas can create cognitive dissonance. When this happens, the schemas must change to accommodate new information.
Characteristics of Schemas
The theorists of the 1970s and 1980s conceptualized schemas as structures for representing broad concepts in memory (Ortony, 1977; McVee, Dunsmore, and Gavelek, 2005).
Examples
Piaget developed the notion of schemata, mental “structures,” which act as frameworks through which the individual classifies and interprets the world.
A schema can be discrete and specific or sequential and elaborate. For example, a schema may be as specific as recognizing a dog or as elaborate as categorizing different types of dogs.
For example, when a parent reads to a child about dogs, the child constructs a schema about dogs.


On a more sophisticated level, the schema allows us to interpret geographical features, understand complex mathematical formulae, and understand acceptable behavior associated with particular roles and contexts.
Piaget argues that, as we grow and mature, our schemata become increasingly more complex and intricate, allowing us access to more sophisticated understandings and interpretations of the world.
For instance, it will learn to distinguish objects and people and manipulate its surroundings.
As it develops further, the child will develop the schemata necessary to deal with more abstract and symbolic concepts, such as spoken (and later, written) language, together with mathematical and logical reasoning.
Schema and Culture
People develop schemas for their own and other cultures. They may also develop schemas for cultural understanding. Cultural information and experiences are stored and schemas and support cultural identity.
For example, someone growing up in England may develop a schema around Christmas involving crackers, caroling, turkey, mince pies, and Saint Nicholas.
This schema may affirm their cultural identity if they say, spend Christmas in Sicily, where a native schema of Christmas would likely involve eating several types of fish.
A schema used for cultural understanding is more than a stereotype about the members of a culture.
While stereotypes tend to be rigid, schemas are dynamic and subject to revision, and while stereotypes tend to simplify and ignore group differences, a schema can be complex (Renstch, Mot, and Abbe, 2009).
Types
There are several types of schemata.
Event schema
Event schemas often called cognitive scripts, describe behavioral and event sequences and daily activities. These provide a basis for anticipating the future, setting objectives, and making plans.
For example, the behavior sequence where people are supposed to become hungry in the evening may lead someone to make evening reservations at a restaurant.
Event schemata are automatic and can be difficult to change, such as texting while driving.
Self-schema
In turn, this influences peoples’ behavior towards others and their motivations.
Because information about the self continually comes into a person’s mind as a result of experience and social interaction, the self-schema constantly evolves over the lifespan (Lemme, 2006).
Object schemaObject schema helps to interpret inanimate objects. They inform people’s understanding of what objects are, how they should function, and what someone can expect from them.For example, someone may have an object schema around how to use a pen.
Object schema
Object schema helps to interpret inanimate objects. They inform people’s understanding of what objects are, how they should function, and what someone can expect from them.For example, someone may have an object schema around how to use a pen.
Object schema helps to interpret inanimate objects. They inform people’s understanding of what objects are, how they should function, and what someone can expect from them.
For example, someone may have an object schema around how to use a pen.
Role schemaRole schemas invoke knowledge about how people are supposed to behave based on their roles in particular social situations (Callero, 1994).For example, at a polite dinner party, someone with the role of the guest may be expected not to put their elbows on the table and to not talk over others.
Role schema
Role schemas invoke knowledge about how people are supposed to behave based on their roles in particular social situations (Callero, 1994).For example, at a polite dinner party, someone with the role of the guest may be expected not to put their elbows on the table and to not talk over others.
Role schemas invoke knowledge about how people are supposed to behave based on their roles in particular social situations (Callero, 1994).
For example, at a polite dinner party, someone with the role of the guest may be expected not to put their elbows on the table and to not talk over others.
How Schemas Change
Piaget argued that people experience a biological urge to maintain equilibrium, a state of balance between internal schema and the external environment – in other words, the ability to fully understand what’s going on around us using our existing cognitive models.
Through the processes of accommodation and assimilation, schemas evolve and become more sophisticated.
Inassimilation, new information becomes incorporated into pre-existing schemas. The information itself does not change the schema, as the schema already accounts for the new information. Assimilation promotes the “status quo” of cognitive structures (Piaget, 1976).
For organisms to learn and develop, they must be able to adapt their schemas to new information and construct new schemas for unfamiliar concepts.
Piaget argues that, on occasions, new environmental information is encountered that doesn’t match neatly with existing schemata, and we must consequently adjust and refine these schemas using the accommodation.
Inaccommodation, existing schemas may be altered or new ones formed as a person learns new information or has new experiences. This disrupts the structure of pre-existing schemas and may lead to the creation of a new schema altogether.
Generally, psychologists believe that schemas are easier to change during childhood than later in life. They may also persist despite encounters with evidence that contradicts an individual’s beliefs.
Consequently, as people grow and learn more about their world, their schemata become more specialized and refined until they are able to perform complex abstract cognitions.
Consequently, the reason that 6-year-old rocket scientists are thin on the ground is that the differences between the mental abilities of children and adults are qualitative as well as quantitative.
How Schemas Affect Learning
Several instructional strategies can follow from schema theory. One of the most relevant implications of schema theory to teaching is the role that prior knowledge plays in students’ processing of information.
For learners to process information effectively, something needs to activate their existing schemas related to the new content. For instance, it would be unlikely that a student would be able to fully interpret the implications of Jacobinism without an existing schema around the existence of the French Revolution (Widmayer, 2001).
This idea that schema activation is important to learning is reflected in popular theories of learning, such as the third stage of Gagne’s nineconditions of learning, “Stimulating Recall of Prior Knowledge.”
Learners under schema theory acquire knowledge in a similar way to Piaget’s model of cognitive developments. There are three main reactions that a learner can have to new information (Widmayer, 2001):
Unlike Piaget, schema theorists do not see each schema as representative of discrete stages of development, and the processes of accreditation, tuning, and restructuring happen over multiple domains in a continuous time frame (Widmayer, 2001).
In addition to schema, psychologists believe that learners also have mental models — dynamic models for problem-solving based on a learner’s existing schema and perceptions of task demand and task performance.
Rather than starting from nothing, people have imprecise, partial, and idiosyncratic understandings to tasks that evolve with experience (Driscoll, 1994).
Critical Evaluation
While schema theory gives psychologists a framework for understanding how humans process knowledge, some scholars have argued that it is ill-constrained and provides few assumptions about how this processing actually works.
This lack of constraint, it has been argued, allows the theory enough flexibility for people to explain virtually any set of empirical data using the theory.
The flexibility of schema theory also gives it limited predictive value and, thus, a limited ability to be tested as a scientific theory (Thorndyke and Yekovich, 1979).
Thorndyke and Yekovich (1979) elaborate on the shortcomings of a schema as a predictive theory. In the same vein as the criticism about the flexibility of schema theory, Thorndyke and Yekovich note that it is difficult to find data inconsistent with schema theory and that it has largely been used for descriptive purposes to account for existing data.
Lastly, Thorndyke and Yekovich (1979) argue that the second area of theoretical weakness in Schema theories lies in its specification of detailed processes for manipulating and creating schemas.
One competing theory to the schema theory of learning isAusubel’s Meaningful Receptive Learning Theory(1966). In short, Ausubel’s Meaningful Reception Learning Theory states that learners can learn best when the new material being taught can be anchored into existing cognitive information in the learners.
In contrast to Ausbel’s theory, the learner in schema theory actively builds schemas and revises them in light of new information. As a result, each individual’s schema is unique and dependent on that individual’s experiences and cognitive processes.
Ausubel proposed a hierarchical organization of knowledge where the learner more or less attaches new knowledge to an existing hierarchy. In this representation, structure, as well as meaning, drives memory.
Applications
Schemas are a major determinant of how people think, feel, behave, and interact socially. People generally accept their schemas as truths about the world outside of awareness, despite how they influence the processing of experiences.
Those with personality disorders often fail to respond to traditional cognitive behavioral theory (Beck et al., 1990). Rather than targeting acute psychiatric symptoms, schema therapy targets the underlying characteristics of personality disorders.
The schema therapy model has three main constructs: “schemas,” or core psychological themes; “coping styles,” or characteristic behavioral responses to schemas; and “modes,” which are the schemas and coping styles operating at a given moment (Martin and Young, 2009).
According to the schema therapy framework, the earliest and most central schemas tend to originate in one’s childhood. These schemas begin as representations of the child’s environment based on reality and develop from the interactions between a child’s innate temperament and specific unmet, core childhood needs (Martin and Young, 2009).
References
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Armbruster, B. B. (1986).Schema theory and the design of content-area textbooks.Educational Psychologist, 21(4), 253-267
Ausubel, D. P. (1966). Meaningful reception learning and the acquisition of concepts.In Analyses of concept learning(pp. 157-175). Academic Press.
Bartlett, F. C., & Bartlett, F. C. (1995).Remembering: A study in experimental and social psychology. Cambridge University Press.
Beck, A. T., Freeman, A., & Associates. (1990).Cognitive therapy of personality disorders. New York: Guilford Press.
Brewer, W. F., & Treyens, J. C. (1981). Role of schemata in memory for places.Cognitive Psychology, 13(2), 207-230.
Driscoll, M. P. (1994).Psychology of learning for instruction. Allyn & Bacon.
Gagne, R. M., & Glaser, R. (1987). Foundations in learning research.Instructional technology: foundations, 49-83.
Halliday, M. A. K., & Hasan, R. (1989).Language, context, and text: Aspects of language in a social-semiotic perspective.
Johnson, M. (1987).The body in mind: The bodily basis of meaning, imagination. Reason.
Kant, I. (1929).Critique of Pure Reason(1781-1787), Trans. Kemp Smith.
Kaplan, R. B. (1966). Cultural thought patterns in intercultural education.Language Learning, 16(1), 1-20.
Lemme, B. H. (2006)Development in Adulthood. Boston, MA. Pearson Education, Inc
Marshall, S. P. (1995).Schemas in problem solving. Cambridge University Press.
Martin, R., & Young, J. (2009). Schema therapy.Handbook of Cognitive-Behavioral Therapies, 317.
McVee, M. B., Dunsmore, K., & Gavelek, J. R. (2005). Schema theory revisited.Review of Educational Research, 75(4), 531-566.
Ortony, A., & Anderson, R. C. (1977). Definite descriptions and semantic memory.Cognitive Science, 1(1), 74-83.
Pankin, J. (2013). Schema theory and concept formation.Presentation at MIT, Fall.
Piaget, J. (1976). Piaget’s theory.In Piaget and his school(pp. 11-23). Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg.
Price, E. A., & Driscoll, M. P. (1997). An inquiry into the spontaneous transfer of problem-solving skill.Contemporary Educational Psychology, 22(4), 472-494.
Rentsch, J. R., Mot, I., & Abbe, A. (2009). Identifying the core content and structure of a schema for cultural understanding. ARMY RESEARCH INST FOR THE BEHAVIORAL AND SOCIAL SCIENCES ARLINGTON VA.
Rumelhart, D. E. (1975). Notes on a schema for stories.In Representation and understanding(pp. 211-236). Morgan Kaufmann.
Rumelhart, D. E. (1984).Schemata and the cognitive system.
Schank, R. C., & Abelson, R. P. (2013).Scripts, plans, goals, and understanding: An inquiry into human knowledge structures. Psychology Press.
Schank, R. C. (1982).Reading and understanding: Teaching from the perspective of artificial intelligence. L. Erlbaum Associates Inc.
Schwartz, N. H., Ellsworth, L. S., Graham, L., & Knight, B. (1998). Accessing prior knowledge to remember text: A comparison of advance organizers and maps.Contemporary Educational Psychology, 23(1), 65-89.
Thorndyke, P. W., & Yekovich, F. R. (1979).A critique of schemata as a theory of human story memory(No. P-6307). Santa Monica, CA. Rand.
Widmayer, S. A. (2004).Schema theory: An introduction. Retrieved December 26, 2004.
Young, J. E. (1990).Cognitive therapy for personality disorders. Professional Resources Press. Sarasota, FL
Further ReadingBaldwin, M. W. (1992). Relational schemas and the processing of social information. Psychological bulletin, 112(3), 461.Padesky, C. A. (1994). Schema change processes in cognitive therapy. Clinical Psychology & Psychotherapy, 1(5), 267-278.
Further Reading
Baldwin, M. W. (1992). Relational schemas and the processing of social information. Psychological bulletin, 112(3), 461.Padesky, C. A. (1994). Schema change processes in cognitive therapy. Clinical Psychology & Psychotherapy, 1(5), 267-278.
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Saul McLeod, PhD
BSc (Hons) Psychology, MRes, PhD, University of Manchester
Saul McLeod, PhD., is a qualified psychology teacher with over 18 years of experience in further and higher education. He has been published in peer-reviewed journals, including the Journal of Clinical Psychology.
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BSc (Hons) Psychology, MSc Psychology of Education
Olivia Guy-Evans is a writer and associate editor for Simply Psychology. She has previously worked in healthcare and educational sectors.
Charlotte NickersonResearch Assistant at Harvard UniversityUndergraduate at Harvard UniversityCharlotte Nickerson is a student at Harvard University obsessed with the intersection of mental health, productivity, and design.
Charlotte NickersonResearch Assistant at Harvard UniversityUndergraduate at Harvard University
Charlotte Nickerson
Research Assistant at Harvard University
Undergraduate at Harvard University
Charlotte Nickerson is a student at Harvard University obsessed with the intersection of mental health, productivity, and design.