Title: Kirsti Lonka, PhD
1IDEAS OF LEARNING BEHIND E-LEARNING?
- Kirsti Lonka, PhD
- Faculty of Medicine
- University of Helsinki, Finland
- / Professor in Medical Education,
- Karolinska Institute, Stockholm
2DILEMMA I
- EDUCATION ANSWERING QUESTIONS NOBODY HAS ASKED
3ONE SOLUTION
- WHAT ABOUT BASING INSTRUCTION ON QUESTIONS, THEN?
4MENTAL MODELS?
- guide our attention, perception memory
- not copies of reality, but emphasize things that
are important for us - emotions, attitudes, values
- are the truth
5CONSTRUCTIVIST IDEAS ON LEARNING
- Learning is actively constructing an
interpretation of the world - This process is question-driven and
explanation-driven - Knowledge acquisition is a question-answer
-process - Learning is a process for working toward more
thorough understanding
6TWO MODES OF THINKING
- NARRATIVE/ MYTHOS
- -what makes up a good story?
- - myths, beliefs
- - experiential
- - holistic, emotional
- - subconscious, free
- PARADIGMATIC/ LOGOS
- - what is the truth?
- - factual knowledge
- - logical
- - analytic, rational
- - conscious, controlled
7THE PROBLEM OF DEAD (INERT) KNOWLEDGE
SCIENTIFIC KNOWLEDGE
RISKS, PROBABILITY
THE REASONING PROCESS
WHICH ONE WINS?
COMMON SENSE
MY OWN GRANNY?
8THE REVIVAL OF DEAD KNOWLEDGE
ACTIVE PROBLEM-SOLVING IN CONTEXT
REASONING
BOOK KNOWLEDGE
TESTING
FEEDBACK
SOLUTION
Reflection
9WHAT IS KNOWLEDGE?
- Traditional answer Knowledge is proven of
confirmed - people find truths - Contemporary answer Knowledge is not proven,
only disconfirmed - people construct temporary
explanations that best fit current knowledge - Postmodern answer All knowledge or
interpretations equally valid - people construct
personal understanding
10APPLICATIONS OF CONSTRUCTIVIST IDEAS I
- ACTIVATING INSTRUCTION (Lonka Ahola, 1995, Eur
Jour Educ Psych) - 1. Activate and diagnose Ask students to
describe what they think about a phenomenom
before instruction - 2. Support the process Scaffold learning, make
thinking processes overt - 3. Give feedback during and after the learning
process.
11APPLICATIONS OF CONSTRUCTIVIST IDEAS II
- PROBLEM-BASED LEARNING (Schmidt, 1983)
- - start with an ill-defined problem which calls
for explanation - - ask the students to brainstorm and construct a
model - - let the students pose the questions and set the
learning goals - - guide the learning process by tutoring
12APPLICATIONS OF CONSTRUCTIVIST IDEAS III
- PROGRESSIVE INQUIRY LEARNING
- - starts from a problem calling for explanation
- - the inquiry process is socially distributed
- - inquiry gradually progresses from a working
theory toward more specific questions - - CSILE (Scardamalia, Bereiter et al.) an
environment for building, articulating,
exploring, and structuring knowledge in
elementary schools
13DISTRIBUTED EXPERTISE?
- SOCIALLY DISTRIBUTED COGNITION people can
overcome their limitations in thinking and
inference by shared problem solving - together
they can solve problems that would be too complex
for one person - PHYSICALLY DISTRIBUTED COGNITION cognitive load
may be divided between a human being and external
thinking tools (e.g., computers, written
documents)
14ELEMENTS OF PROGRESSIVE INQUIRY (Hakkarainen
1998 Hakkarainen, Lonka Lipponen, 1999)
Constructing Working Theories
Setting up Research Questions
Creating the Context
Critical Evaluation
Distributed expertise
Developing New Working Theories
Searching Deepening Knowledge
Generating SubordiGnate Questions
15THE MAIN CHALLENGES OF LEARNING
- Take into account prior beliefs
- Apply socially shared problem solving negotiate
the meaning - Make use of differences between people as well as
frictions between old and new knowledge - Make use of the narrative mode of thinking
- Neither common sense nor facts work alone