scholarly journals Constructivism in Education

Author(s):  
Charlene Tan ◽  
Connie S.L. Ng

In light of the broad, multidimensional, and contestable nature of constructivism, a central debate concerns the object of construction. What do we mean when we say that a learner is constructing something? Three general categories, with overlaps in between, are: the construction of meaning, the construction of knowledge, and the construction of knowledge claims. To construct meaning is to make sense of something by understanding both its parts and overall message. To construct knowledge is to obtain what philosophers traditionally call “justified true belief.” There are three conditions in this formulation of knowledge: belief, truth, and justification. Beliefs are intentional, meaningful, and representational, directing a person to attain truth and avoid error with respect to the very thing that person accepts. As for the notions of truth and justification, there are three major theories of truth, namely the correspondence theory, coherence theory, and pragmatic theory; and seven main types of justification, namely perception, reason, memory, testimony, faith, introspection, and intuition. Finally, to construct a knowledge claim is to indicate that one thinks that one knows something. The crucial difference between knowledge and a knowledge claim is that the latter has not acquired the status of knowledge. There are two main implications for teaching and learning that arise from an epistemological exploration of the concept of constructivism: First, educators need to be clear about what they want their students to construct, and how the latter should go about doing it. Informed by learner profiles and other contingent factors, educators should encourage their students to construct meanings, knowledge, and knowledge claims, individually and collaboratively, throughout their schooling years. Second, educators need to guard against some common misconceptions on constructivism in the schooling context. Constructivism, contrary to popular belief, is compatible with direct instruction, teacher guidance, structured learning, content learning, traditional assessment, and standardized testing. In sum, there are no pedagogical approaches and assessment modes that are necessarily constructivist or anticonstructivist. A variety of teaching methods, resources, and learning environments should therefore be employed to support students in their constructing process.

Author(s):  
Peter Miksza ◽  
Kenneth Elpus

This chapter presents two of the most prominent approaches to the design of descriptive research in music education. Simply creating depictions of music teaching and learning experiences that are organized and illustrative of the variation that can exist in any given setting is a worthwhile scientific endeavor in and of itself. Descriptive research is most typically an exploration of what is, what exists, and/or the status of any given topic of interest. The first section deals with basic steps in observational research designs, and the second section outlines critical features of survey designs. These fundamental research design options are excellent entry points for emerging scholars and when employed imaginatively can yield many benefits for the profession.


Author(s):  
Alan Cooper

This chapter discusses three aspects of Jewish reception of the Ketuvim (Writings or Hagiographa): the status and authority of the Ketuvim in relation to the Torah (Pentateuch) and the Nevi’im (Prophets); the study and liturgical use of Ketuvim, focusing on the so-called Five Scrolls (hamesh megillot) and the Book of Psalms; and the character of traditional commentary on selected books, including recommendations for further reading. The Ketuvim were considered sacred and inspired, but at a lower level of inspiration than the Torah and the Prophets. They were regarded as diverting and edifying, but insufficiently authoritative to support the promulgation of law, which was the fundamental concern of rabbinic teaching and learning. On the whole, Jewish commentators seek to find consistency in the interpretation of the individual books, “taming” their originality in order to conform their meanings both to the rest of Scripture and to normative Jewish teachings.


2008 ◽  
Vol 34 (1) ◽  
pp. 129-153 ◽  
Author(s):  
PATRICK THADDEUS JACKSON

AbstractWhile the recent proliferation in philosophical discussions in International Relations indicates a welcome increase in the discipline’s conceptual sophistication, a central issue has gone relatively unremarked: the question of how to understand the relationship between scholarly observers and their observed objects. This classical philosophical problem has a number of implications for the conduct of inquiry in the discipline, and raises particular challenges for the status of knowledge-claims advanced by constructivists. I clarify these issues and challenges by distinguishing between ‘dualist’ and ‘monist’ ontological standpoints, in the hope of provoking a more focused philosophical discussion.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-26
Author(s):  
Samit Bhattacharya ◽  
Viral bharat Shah ◽  
Krishna Kumar ◽  
Ujjwal Biswas

In improving the teaching and learning experience in a classroom environment, it is crucial for a teacher to have a fair idea about the students who need help during a lecture. However, teachers of large classes usually face difficulties in identifying the students who are in a critical state. The current methods for classroom visualization are limited in showing both the status and location of a large number of students in a limited display area. Additionally, comprehension of the states adds cognitive load on the teacher working in a time-constrained classroom environment. In this article, we propose a two-level visualizer for large classrooms to address the challenges. In the first level, the visualizer generates a colored matrix representation of the classroom. The colored matrix is a quantitative illustration of the status of the class in terms of student clusters. We use three colors: red, yellow, and green, indicating the most critical, less critical, and the normal cluster on the screen, respectively. With tap/click on the first level, detailed information for a cluster is visualized as the second level. We conducted extensive studies for our visualizer in a simulated classroom with 12 tasks and 27 teacher participants. The results show that the visualizer is efficient and usable.


2016 ◽  
Vol 7 (4) ◽  
pp. 768
Author(s):  
Yinghao Li

The paper discusses the status quo of the English culture teaching and learning in Chinese colleges. In the pedagogical level, most foreign language teachers have very vague idea of what the culture should be and what should be taught in terms of English culture. Lacking in the principled methodology in promoting students’ intercultural awareness, teachers either turn deaf to the new trend or frustrated by the communicative approach, somehow falling back to the more traditional but effective grammar-translation approach. The changing scenario of language teaching has constituted new challenges for the English educators in China. The paper proposes that more research should be channeled to the research of the paradigm of the English as an International Language (EIL) through intercultural awareness.


2016 ◽  
Vol 48 (1) ◽  
pp. 39-56 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sylvain P Bureau ◽  
Aris Komporozos-Athanasiou

Entrepreneurs develop activities that aim to challenge the status quo, break rules and subvert systems. How can such a thing be taught/learnt in a business school? This article contributes to current debates within entrepreneurship studies that seek to address the subversive nature of entrepreneurial activity. It presents an ethnographic case study of an entrepreneurship course that attempts to re-define the teaching and learning boundaries of subversive activities in a leading European business school. Drawing on the theory of Bakhtin, which has thus far been overlooked in entrepreneurship studies, we unpick the potentiality of art practices in the learning and experiencing of the subversive dimension of entrepreneurship. We employ the concept of ‘dialogical pedagogy’ in order to address calls for more ‘relationally experienced’ approaches to management learning that foreground the conflicts, emotional strains and uncertainties that are embedded in the fabric of entrepreneurial practice. We show how ‘subversive dialogues’ are enacted between students and teachers as they engage in the learning process, and we discuss implications for critical entrepreneurship teaching in an increasingly commoditized education environment.


Author(s):  
Christian Ollivier

This contribution reflects on the use of digital technologies for the teaching and learning of languages. We place our reflection in the paradigm of social co-construction of meaning and knowledge that requires the learner to be the actor of his/her learning. It is on this basis that we present an educational model that combines information processing, interaction and co-construction of knowledge objects in a sociointeractional context that determines the action of the learning person. A concrete example illustrates the theoretical model presented. We conclude our contribution with a presentation of some key skills that the student must develop to implement learning in the context of this model.


2014 ◽  
Vol 94 (1) ◽  
pp. 57-72
Author(s):  
Sladjana Andjelkovic ◽  
Zorica Stanisavljevic-Petrovic

This paper is a position of contextual and holistic approach, and on the principles of constructivist theory examines the role of natural resources in the teaching and learning process. In the center of interest by the possibility of establishing a partnership relationship with nature in the process of teaching and learning, where nature appears as an asset, source and target classes. The aim is to get through the display and analysis of theoretical approaches to nature as a context for learning and teaching perceive from the perspective of affirmation contextual, holistic, active, investigative approach to teaching. This will promote new teaching strategies in order to change the classical approach to teaching and learning process and open up new opportunities to increase the share of after-school space in order to create teaching situations. Results of the analysis of theoretical starting points in particular knowledge of the value of contextual and holistic learning, achieving partnership with nature, in favor of modern theories in which it promotes active student positions close to reality in the process of construction of knowledge systems.


2016 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
pp. 50
Author(s):  
Terezinha Beserra Sobrinha ◽  
José Ozildo dos Santos

<p style="margin: 0cm 0cm 0pt; text-align: justify; line-height: normal;"><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman','serif'; font-size: 10pt;">A introdução da criança ao mundo dos números através de estímulos e quebra de paradigmas que rondam a matéria, que sempre foi alvo de discriminação por parte dos alunos, é sempre um desafio. A matemática sempre foi vista como uma matéria difícil e incompreensível, inclusive atentando para o uso em nosso cotidiano. O objetivo deste artigo é </span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman','serif'; font-size: 10pt; mso-fareast-font-family: 'Times New Roman'; mso-fareast-language: PT-BR;">analisar o uso das práticas lúdicas como estratégia pedagógica para a aprendizagem da matemática na educação infantil, através do desenvolvimento da ludicidade como caminho para a aprendizagem e a construção do conhecimento através de brincadeiras, jogos e brinquedos, c</span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman','serif'; font-size: 10pt;">ontribuindo para um novo aprendizado de conceitos matemáticos potencializando a aprendizagem e suprir deficiências detectadas nos aluno, tornando as aulas mais dinâmicas, possibilitando uma maior participação e envolvimento dos alunos nessas atividades. Tendo como foco a ludicidade</span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman','serif'; font-size: 10pt; mso-fareast-font-family: 'Times New Roman'; mso-fareast-language: PT-BR;"> fortalecendo o ensino-aprendizado matemático em sala de aula e contribui para uma melhor compreensão da disciplina. </span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman','serif'; font-size: 10pt;">Os números são importantes e uma constante em nosso universo por isso ressalta-se urgência de envolvê-los nesse contexto escolar, assim sendo, a matemática não será mais uma obrigação escolar e sim um instrumento de prazer no processo da aprendizagem, uma forma de crescimento de desenvolvimento pessoal, a criança perceberá um novo mundo à sua volta, uma espécie de autonomia. </span></p><p style="margin: 0cm 0cm 0pt; text-align: justify; line-height: normal;"><strong><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman','serif'; font-size: 10pt;"> </span></strong></p><p align="center"><strong><em>The playful</em></strong><strong><em> </em></strong><strong><em>learning</em></strong><strong><em>: </em></strong><strong><em>promoting</em></strong><strong><em> </em></strong><strong><em>mathematics</em></strong><strong><em> </em></strong><strong><em>education</em></strong><strong><em></em></strong></p><p><strong>Abstract: </strong>The introduction of the child to the world of numbers by encouraging and breaking paradigms that surround the area, which has always been discriminated against by the students, it is always a challenge. Mathematics has always been seen as a difficult and incomprehensible matter, including paying attention to use in our daily lives. The objective of this paper is to analyze the use of leisure practices as a pedagogical strategy for the learning of mathematics in early childhood education through the development of playfulness as a path to learning and the construction of knowledge through play, games and toys, contributing to a new learning mathematical concepts enhancing learning and supply deficiencies in the student, making classes more dynamic, enabling greater participation and involvement of students in these activities. Focusing on the playfulness strengthening the mathematical teaching and learning in the classroom and contributes to a better understanding of the discipline. Numbers are important and a constant in our universe so it emphasizes urgency to involve them in the school context, therefore, the math is no longer a school obligation but an instrument of pleasure in the learning process, a form of growth personal development, the child will realize a new world around them, a kind of autonomy.</p>


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