Readings
Instructor notes
Web resources
Driscoll, Chapters 5, 11, and 12.
Note: For
purposes of this course, we will not consider "situated cognition"
(Driscoll, Chapter 5) to be a separate theory, but rather a set of ideas
and research paradigms that are important to constructivism.
Optional:
Gredler, pages 71-76.
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What is constructivism?
One thing that can
make constructivism difficult to grasp is that sometimes it seems like
a philosophy, and sometimes it seems like a set of instructional practices.
People may use these two senses of the word constructivism interchangeably,
often without being clear about whether they mean one, the other, or both.
As a philosophy,
constructivism suggests that, while there is a real world out there,
there is no meaning inherent in it. Meaning is imposed by people and
cultures. So, for example, one who followed the constructivist philosophy
might say that there is nothing inherently correct about the way we
classify living things (genus, species, etc.). This classification system
is a human invention, and it is subject to revision or replacement.
Thus, when we teach this classification system, we should teach it not
as fact, but as the current system accepted by scientists. And we should
also teach about the process of creating a classification system, not
just the end product.
As a set of instructional
practices, constructivism favors processes over end products; guided
discovery over expository learning; authentic, embedded learning situations
over abstracted, artificial ones; portfolio assessments over multiple-choice
exams, etc.
Why is this distinction
between constructivism as a philosophy (epistemology, to be more accurate)
and constructivism as a set of teaching practices important? Because
it is my contention that you could be a constructivist in philosophy
without always using constructivist teaching methods. A useful analogy
is with physics: Newtonian mechanics have been demonstrated to be inadequate
and replaced by Einsteinian mechanics. However, we can continue to use
Newtonian laws for many local situations because they work well enough
and are simpler. Similarly, I may believe that people must construct
their own knowledge--even of objects in the physical world--but I may
choose to use relatively didactic approaches for some kinds of learning
because it is expedient and works well enough.
On the other hand,
someone who espouses an objectivist philosophy (if you can find anyone
who admits to it!) would likely agree that constructivist-like teaching
approaches are appropriate for areas of "knowing" that are highly divergent,
say in the arts, literature, ethics, etc. Can you imagine teaching an
ethics course didactically? It would be absurd. You would likely have
to acknowledge that an ethical sense is something each learner has to
develop for him/herself, and that the job of the course would be to
provide an opportunity to do that with guidance.
Also, keep in mind
that believing in a constructivist philosophy or epistemology does not
automatically dictate using any particular set of teaching strategies--any
more than being a behaviorist automatically dictates using teaching
machines. Different learning theories may suggest particular kinds of
instructional strategies, but they do not determine them fully.
Influences on constructivist
"theories" of instruction
Constructivism, of
course, did not simply spring up out of nowhere. In addition to the historical
antecedents that your text discusses, constructivism seems to be related
to a number of other ideas from the "cultures" of education, psychology,
and other fields. These include
- Qualitative/naturalistic
research paradigms: Finding meaning in particulars rather than
generalities. Increasing interest in these forms of research supports
the constructivist notion that what is unique (in people, events,
institutions, etc.) is at least as important as what one can generalize
about them.
- Situated cognition/learning:
Learning in the "natural" setting seems to be quite different from
learning in school. Lave, Brown, Resnick, and other psychologists
have written extensively about the ways in which typical school learning
tasks seem to be remote from the kind of learning we do outside of
formal instructional settings. Thus, educators have sought ways to
make school learning more "authentic."
- Donald Schon's
ideas about reflective practice in the professions: The real challenge
of professional practice is framing a problem, not solving it after
it has already been defined. Schon's ideas have been influential,
particularly in education in the professions. What is important in
the practice of most professions, Schon says, is the artistry of framing
a problem in a useful way, not the "science" of solving it once it
has been framed.
- Cognitive
and intellectual development theorists: E.g., Vygotsky, Bruner,
Piaget, William Perry, Belenky. All have had something to say about
the ways in which children or young adults "construct" their understanding
of the world at various stages.
- Hypertext/hypermedia:The
notion of bodies of information that can be connected and organized
in various, idiosyncratic ways (of which the World Wide Web is a prime
example) is an obvious analogy to the constructivist idea of uniquely
constructed understandings.
Constructivism:
Opposing viewpoints to ponder
Point: "[Constructivism]
holds that learning is infinite and not subject to the sorts of analyses
favored by objectivists except in the most trivial cases [emphasis
added]. Things can be known from a variety of sign systems (verbal,
mathematical, visual, musical, gestural, etc.), a variety of metaphors
... , and with varying degrees of self awareness of the processes by
means of which constructions are made. The role of education in a constructivist
view is to show students how to construct knowledge, to promote collaboration
with others to show the multiple perspectives that can be brought to
bear on a particular problem, and to arrive at self-chosen positions
[emphasis added] to which they can commit themselves, while realizing
the basis of other views with which they may disagree." (from D. J.
Cunningham, Assessing constructions and constructing assessments, p.
36. In Constructivism and the technology of instruction: A conversation
(1992), Duffy, T. M. & Jonassen, D. H., eds. Hilldale, NJ: Lawrence
Erlbaum Associates.
Counterpoint:
"... [C]onstructivists argue that specific learning objectives are
not possible--that meaning is always constructed by, and unique to,
the individual; that all understanding is negotiated. In our opinion
this is a very extreme position. Let me speak up for the vast amount
of "trivial cases," those situations where shared meaning is not only
possible but necessary. Do we want students to have a "self-chosen position"
with regard to the sound of letters in learning to read? Do we want
students to have a "self-chosen position" about the meaning of the integers.
Will a machine allow us to have a "self-chosen position" about how it
works? ... Do we want students to have a "self-chosen position" ...
about how to solve a linear equation? Do we want drivers to have a "self-chosen
position" about the meaning of a red light? ... If I hire a surgeon
to do heart surgery, PLEASE let me have one who has learned the trivial
case and knows that my heart looks like every other human heart. Please
don't let him negotiate new meanings and hook up my veins in some "self-chosen
position to which [she/he] can commit [herself/himself]." I want her/him
committed to the standard objective view. The trivial case is not so
trivial. To dismiss so casually the objective case is perhaps the greatest
danger of radical constructivism." (From M. D. Merrill, Constructivism
and instructional design, pp. 107-108. (same publication as above)
The Learner-Centered
Principles
A large group of
Educational Psychologists created a framework for instruction based
on constructivistic-type principles. These learner-centered principles
are important because they translate constructivism as a philosophy
into action. Make sure to visit their site at http://www.apa.org/ed/lcp2/homepage.html.
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The Web Resources page has
are several short sites that you may find useful. There is also a site
that allows you to access the full text of some 70 articles on constructivism.
However, you have to have the right "plug-in" installed on your computer
to be able to use this.
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Comments: joalexan@indiana.edu