Think About This

Learning  Tagged , No Comments »

“It would be particularly oxymoronic to convey the idea of constructionism through a definition, since, after all, constructionism boils down to demanding that everything be understood by being constructed.”

~Seymour Papert

Hmmmm….

How well do we learn new concepts by simply defining them using a dictionary… a staple of educational practice in classrooms? There are certainly differing levels of knowing, and choosing a correct definition from incorrect distractors has value at some level. However, when real understanding is the goal, something else must be valued and sought after in the classroom. If we want our students to USE knowledge or information in meaningful ways, the definitions themselves hold very little value.

What are you doing to get your students to move beyond knowledge as definitions?

Blocks to Robots

Learning, constructionism, constructivism, meaning, pedagogy  Tagged , , , , , No Comments »

I am beginning to read Blocks to Robots: Learning With Technology in the Early Childhood Classroom by Mariana Umaschi Bers. I have only read the foreward which is written by David Elkind, a favorite author of mine. I love how he writes. And this passage struck me as so clear and well-written that I would like to share it here. In describing constructionism, a theoretical framework built on the shoulders of Jean Piaget, Seymour Papert, and others…

“When children build their own mechanical/electronic objects, they have created experience from which they learn new concepts of space, time, and causality. Indeed, in this self-created virutal world, space has become portable, time has become retrievable, and causality has become programmable.”

I love how that it worded. Children of all ages so need learning opportunities where causality is programmable - where they learn through direct interactions with their environment, but where they hold the power over this environment and are able to manipulate it in so many ways. The fact that these interactions are both portable and retrievable makes it even more attractive. Opportunities for learning through construction are so vast. My graduate students felt overwhelmed by the endless learning opportunities and potential afforded by new technologies.

But tell me this - is the bigger challenge getting teachers to understand and value constructivist/constructionist principles, or is it getting them to use new technologies? It would seem to me that the former must happen before the latter, or at least, they must happen simultaneously. It is extremely hard to explain the learning power that can be leveraged with new technologies when the theoretical frameworks upon which these learning experience are built are so foreign, so uncomfortable to begin with.

I’m really looking forward to the rest of this book.


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