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What is Contextual Index

Handbook of Research on Human Performance and Instructional Technology
A contextual index is a contruct with which to identify those elements that exist in our knowledge that are linked to the contexts where that knowledge was built. This knowledge is intricately related to the characteristics of a particular situation where a type of activity is performed. Thus, contextual indices built in a certain situation would be different if built in another situation. This is not a quantitative concept, but rather an abstract concept to identify the presence of the context in learning. Contextual indices are classified in two categories: original contextual indices and contextual indices of use.
Published in Chapter:
Three Contexts Methodology: Strategies to Bring Reality to the Classroom
Antonio Santos (Universidad de las Américas Puebla, México)
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-60566-782-9.ch004
Abstract
The main objective of this manuscript is to propose a methodology called the Three Contexts Methodology based in the situated learning paradigm. It attempts to integrate three contexts related to the process of learning: 1) the context of the community of professional practice that created the content; 2) the school classroom; and 3) the context in which what is learned is going to be applied. Through this the 3CM strives to improve learning transfer and the integration of technology. To give a theoretical base to the 3CM, first an analysis of how human cognition is naturally intertwined with our social activity is done and how, in this way, professional communities of practice are generated. Then, these ideas are contrasted with the type of cognition that the traditional school promotes and some learning problems are identified. Using these antecedents as a base, the Three Contexts Methodology is described and finally, a set of results are described and analyzed when this methodology was applied to a group of students from a local junior high school.
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