Jay Doubleyou: learning theory: a short guide
One in particular is 'constructivism':
Constructivism as a paradigm or worldview posits that learning is an active, constructive process. The learner is an information constructor. People actively construct or create their own subjective representations of objective reality. New information is linked to to prior knowledge, thus mental representations are subjective.
- Lev Semyonovich Vygotsky (1896 – 1943)[1]
- Jean Piaget (1896 – 1980)[2]
- John Dewey (1859 – 1952)
- Jerome Seymour Bruner (1915 – 2016)
Constructivism - Learning Theories
One problem now is that the ideas of Vygotsky are now seen as a total fabrication:
Lev Vygotsky - Wikipedia
Nevertheless, there are some great practical ways of using these ideas:
Jay Doubleyou: play and learning
From Wikipedia:
Constructivism in education is an epistemological perspective of learning focused on how students actively create (or “construct”) knowledge out of their experiences.
Emphasis is placed on agency and prior "knowing" and experience of the learner, which is often determined by their social and cultural contexts environment.
While Behaviorist models of learning may help understand what students are doing, educators also need to know what students are thinking, and how to enrich what students are thinking.[1]
Contents
- 1History
- 2Individual
- 3Pedagogies based on constructivism
- 4Criticism
- 5Confusion between constructivist and maturationist views
- 6Radical constructivism
- 7Relational constructivism
- 8Social constructivism
- 9Communal constructivism
- 10Influence on computer science and robotics
- 11See also
- 12References
- 13Further reading
- 14External links
Constructivism (philosophy of education) - Wikipedia
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