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Title: cep900 10.30.06


1
cep900 10.30.06
  • Constructivism
  • Bruner, J. (1960). A Process of Education (Chap 1
    2)
  • Phillips, D. C. (1995). The good, the bad, and
    the ugly The many faces of constructivism. 
    Educational Researcher, 24 (7), 5-12.

2
assignments
  • Continue rdp work Check the list
  • Cognitive perspectives
  • Phillips, D. C., Soltis, J. F. (1991). Problem
    solving, insight, and activity.
  • Phillips, D. C., Soltis, J. F. (1991).
    Piagetian structures and psychological
    constructivism.
  • Miller, P. H. (1993). Piaget's cognitive-stage
    theory. (skim)
  • Buy Vygotsky, Mind in Society

3
jerome bruner
  • TIP Theories
  • jerome bruner and the process of education
  • What was the context of A Process of Education?

4
key ideas of A Process"
  • "Any subject can be taught effectively in some
    intellectually honest form to any child at any
    stage of development"
  • Spiral curriculum
  • Structure of a discipline
  • Intuitive and explicit forms of knowing
  • Learning by inquiry/discovery

5
bruner's structure
  • If students have a limited time with education,
    what should we teach?
  • To learn structure is to learn how things are
    related
  • Powerful ideas that represent key relationships
    in a discipline. Apply to many different
    phenomenon
  • Knowledge of structure facilitates memory,
    comprehension, transfer, etc.
  • Examples of structure in a discipline?

6
" any subject can be taughtto any child
  • Learning quadratic equations
  • Consider some examples in your discipline. What
    are some advanced ideas and do you think that
    it can be taught to any child?

7
spiral curriculum
  • From enactive (actions), to iconic (pictures), to
    symbolic (words, symbols) level of representation
    and understanding
  • Bruners perspective on development influenced by
    Piaget
  • Important subject-matter ideas/structure are
    taught early and often

8
structure schwab's version
  • Joseph Schwab's (philosopher, science educator)
  • Substantive structure of a discipline (theories,
    concepts, facts)
  • Syntactic structure (process by which knowledge
    is adjudicated, I.e. its validity determined)
  • Consider substantive and syntactic structures of
    your discipline

9
intuitive and explicit knowing
  • Intuitive knowing without explicit words, or
    formal conceptualizing
  • Enactive (actions), iconic (pictures, signs),
    symbolic (words, symbols) representations
  • Later, Bruner wrote about Narrative and
    Paradigmatic forms of knowing, another way of
    distinguishing different kinds of thought.
  • modes of understanding,communicating,-narrati...

10
constructivism
  • Currently the dominant epistemology (theory of
    knowledge) and ideology (system of values
    beliefs) in colleges of education
  • Not as dominant in educational practice
  • As the dominant paradigm, constructivism is often
    unquestioned, taken for granted, insensitive to
    variation

11
constructivism
  • Not really a single theory, but more of a broad
    collection of shared beliefs about learning and
    teaching. What are those beliefs?

12
constructivism some common qualities
  • Where does knowledge come from? People create
    knowledge, as opposed to Nature as instructor or
    instinct as instructor
  • Who constructs knowledge? Either individuals or
    groups of people (social constructivism)
  • Is learning active? Learning is an mentally
    active activity, as opposed to a receptive,
    mechanical activity

13
phillips concern
  • It could be argued here that a weak or at least
    controversial epistemology has become the basis
    for a strong pedagogic policy. p11
  • The bad constructivism can lead to relativism,
    disconnecting from reality, diminishing role of
    reason

14
activity assessing different kinds of
constructivism
  • Although many people say they are
    constructivists, they may be different in some
    ways. Develop some assessment items that could
    help you describe in more detail the nature of
    someones constructivist beliefs.
  • Work in teams to develop a few items.

15
phillips 3 dimensions of constructivism
  • Where does knowledge come from? Nature as
    instructor vs. people as creator vs. instinct as
    instructor
  • Who constructs knowledge? Individual vs. social
    construction
  • Active vs. passive process. To what degree is
    knowing a physical mental activity vs.
    receptive, mechanical activity

16
the ideology of constructivism
  • Knowledge is a human construction, not something
    external, unchanging, independent of human
    activity
  • Legitimates individual interpretation, individual
    experience (e.g. misconceptions are now
    alternative conceptions)
  • Emphasizes the role of social, political,
    institutions in determining what is considered
    true (truth is determined by consensus or power
    in addition to reason and evidence)

17
roots of constructivism
  • R. Descartes importance of reason in search for
    Truth. Age of Enlightenment, age of Reason.
  • I. Kant categories of thought, never being able
    to see the world as it is
  • J. Piaget knowing as adaptive functioning
    operating on a representation of the world

18
roots of constructivism
  • K. Popper theories can never be proved, only
    falsified. Knowledge is never certain, always
    tentative

19
social construction of knowledge
  • Not only is knowledge constructed, it is
    constructed by groups.
  • T. Kuhn Structure of Scientific Revolutions,
    science knowledge is socially constructed in
    disciplinary communities
  • Influences from literary criticism, critical
    theory, feminist scholars
  • When viewing knowledge as a social construction,
    one attends to issues of power, politics,
    culture, context, history, gender, ethnicity,
    etc.

20
social construction of knowledge
  • Examples IQ, disability, literacy. To what
    extent are these constructs real?

21
constructivist terminology
  • knower is an actor, spectator or player man
    proposes nature disposes prewired cognitive
    processes knowledge as an adaptive function
    child as scientist knowledge as consensus
    knowledge as rational empirical knowledge as
    politics or fashion reality as social
    construction

22
posner et al. conceptual change
  • One of the most cited articles in science
    education
  • Conceptual change perspective was very prominent
    around 1980 to 1995
  • Stimulated research on students conceptions,
    misconceptions, alternative conceptions,
    epistemological beliefs

23
conceptions and misconceptions
  • Bodies in motion
  • Plant growth
  • Light and vision
  • Density

24
conceptual change theory
  • Characteristics of the theory
  • Learning is assimilation and accommodation of
    concepts
  • Assumes learner is rational and motivated to
    resolve logical problems
  • Conditions of conceptual change Dissatisfaction
    with existing conceptions. Alternative
    conceptions must be intelligible, plausible, and
    suggest fruitful research

25
constructivism self-assessment
  • To what degree to you believe
  • There is a real world out there
  • We perceive the real world
  • The real world is knowable
  • Agree (1).Disagree (5)

26
constructivism self-assessment
  • There is Truth out there.
  • There is one real world
  • It can be accessed sooner or later through
    inquiry (reason, and observation, action)
  • The process of understanding the world involves
    mainly the person and the world
  • Science is the best way to progress towards the
    Truth
  • Unbiased observation is possible
  • What we know, what we do, do not alter what is
    real out there.
  • Agree (1).Disagree (5)

27
constructivism self-assessment
  • In an English class, one students interpretation
    of a poem is as good as another
  • In a science class, one students explanations
    about why a plant withers in a dark room is as
    good as another
  • In a social studies class, one students
    attitudes about immigrants is as good as another
  • Agree (1).Disagree (5)

28
constructivism self-assessment
  • How do you know something to be true?

29
constructivism self-assessment
  • How are you certain about these truths?
  • the world is round
  • humans have free will
  • the older woman you grew up with is your mother
  • humans have the right to life, liberty, and the
    pursuit of happiness
  • the love you get is equal to the love you make

30
constructivism self-assessment
  • My beliefs and knowledge come from
  • A) experience and reason
  • B) social pressures to agree with others
  • C) emotion or intuition
  • D) other sources

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