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What is Social Constructivism

Handbook of Research on Transdisciplinary Knowledge Generation
The central idea of social constructivism is that human learning is constructed and knowledge is constructed through social interaction and is a shared rather than an individual experience (Vygotsky, 1978).
Published in Chapter:
Social Constructivism as a Theoretical Foundation of Cross-Cultural Mentoring for Foreign-Born Faculty
Pi-Chi Han (National Kaohsiung Normal University, Taiwan, Taiwan)
Copyright: © 2019 |Pages: 15
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-5225-9531-1.ch015
Abstract
Globalization results in the diffusion of people across geographical boundaries. Over the past twenty years, the number of foreign-born faculty has continued to increase in American universities.. Foreign-born faculty represent a significant labor force in the global academic settings; they bring in diversity, new perspectives, and innovative skills wherever they teach. Research asserts that foreign-born faculty encounter huge cultural change that make their lives tremendously difficult in the host country. Furthermore, studies also suggest that cross-cultural mentoring may serve as a solution to help foreign-born faculty adapt to the host countries.. However, there has been a lack of theoretical justification to conceptualize cross-cultural mentoring. This chapter proposes the theory of social constructivism as the theoretical foundation and suggests an action-reflection practice to help the theory building inquiry and conceptualize cross-cultural mentorship for foreign-born faculty.
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Role of the Social Constructivist Theory, Andragogy, and Computer-Mediated Instruction (CMI) in Adult ESL Learning and Teaching Environments: How Students Transform Into Self-Directed Learners Through Mobile Technologies
The central idea of constructivism is that human learning is constructed and that learners build new knowledge upon the foundation of previous learning. This view of learning sharply contrasts with one in which learning is the passive transmission of information from one individual to another, a view in which reception, not construction, is key. Vygotsky’s social constructivist theory can provide adult ESL students with the ability to construct their own meanings by critical thinking. Social constructivism is a learning perspective founded on the assumption that learning is focused on learners and promotes their active participation as they manage to construct their own knowledge depending on their own reality.
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Understanding Persuasion Mechanisms for Effective Communication in Online Educational Environments: Persuade Your Students by Empowering Them!
Is a theory according to which that all human knowledge and development is the result of social interaction and language use, making it a shared, rather than an individual, experience.
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Strategies to Maximize Asynchronous Learning
A view of learning based on social collaboration, in addition to experience. It holds that individuals learn when working with others.
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Cognitive vs. Social Constructivist Learning for Research and Training on the Angoff Method
A perspective of learning that emphasizes social cognition or learning through interaction with peers.
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Mobile Technologies for Making Meaning in Education: Using Augmented Reality to Connect Learning
Knowledge construction that occurs by interacting and engaging with others.
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Speech Recognition via IPA-Based Phonetic Data Coding and Analysis: Descriptive Coding, Pattern Coding, and Phonetic Transcription in Phenomenological Research
Social constructivism is a learning perspective founded on the assumption that learning is focused on learners and promotes their active participation as they manage to construct their own knowledge depending on their own reality. Vygotsky’s (1978) AU12: The in-text citation "Vygotsky’s (1978)" is not in the reference list. Please correct the citation, add the reference to the list, or delete the citation. social constructivist theory stipulates that students acquire the ability to construct their own meanings by critical thinking.
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Modeling a New Smart Learning Management System Based on the EML
Is centered on the learner. The learner learns through its representations. The construction of knowledge although personal is carried out in a social setting. The context and come from both what we think and what others bring as interactions.
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Blended Learning Primer
Constructivist philosophy stressing the importance of social interactions in the construction of knowledge.
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Scrolling Time and Micro Learning Experimental Environments
Theory of knowledge whereby knowledge is built within a social context through interactions, language, and other symbol systems. Social constructivism sees learning as a process of constructing meaning and not as the acquisition of knowledge that exists externally with respect to the student.
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Internet Technologies and Language Teacher Education
A learning theory. Each of us is shaped by our experiences and interactions. Each new experience or interaction is taken into our schemata and shapes our perspectives and behaviour.
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Context-Free Educational Games: Open-Source and Flexible
Extends constructivism into social settings, wherein groups construct knowledge for one another, collaboratively creating a small culture of shared artifacts with shared meanings. When one is immersed within a culture like this, one is learning all the time about how to be a part of that culture, on many levels.
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Evaluating the Political Communicative Approach of the European Union and the United States Towards Russia Since the Russian Invasion of Ukraine
A theoretical framework that emphasizes the role of social interactions, norms, and shared meanings in shaping international relations. Social constructivism suggests that the EU, the US, and Russia’s communicative approaches are influenced by their perceptions of their roles as key actors in the global arena and their relationships with one another.
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Teachers as Researchers and Instructional Leaders
Social constructivism recognizes that knowledge is constructed through social interaction and is a shared rather than an individual experience ( Vygotsky, 1978 ).
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Designing Cross-Cultural Collaborative Online Learning
Social constructivism is a theory of knowledge and learning which contends that categories of knowledge and reality are actively created by social relationships and interactions.
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Behave Yourself!: An Investigation of the Impact of Tutor Behaviour on the Student Experience of Online Distance-Based Learning
A learning theory (attributed to Vygotsky) that suggests that human beings create ‘meaning’ from an educational experience by learning with others.
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When Virtual Communities Click: Transforming Teacher Practice, Transforming Teachers
Social constructivism is an educational theory of acquiring knowledge which emphasizes the importance of culture and context in and constructing knowledge.
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A Framework for Developing Deeper Self-Directed Learning in Computer Science Education
A learning theory that encompasses both intrapersonal and interpersonal domains by highlighting reflective thinking and collaboration with peers as central components of the learning process.
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Cultivation of Leadership in Higher Education Students
Social constructivism based on the work of theorists such as Vygotsky, centres on the personal construction of knowledge through social interaction.
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Inquiry-Based Learning in Action: Theory and Practice in Higher Education
The process of co-constructing knowledge through dialogue and interaction with others in the social environment.
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Designing an IMS-LD Meta-Model of a New Smart Learning Management System
Is centered on the learner. The learner learns through its representations. The construction of knowledge although personal is carried out in a social setting. The context and come from both what we think and what others bring as interactions.
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Collaborative Learning in Schools With Social Media: A Social Constructivist View
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RSS and Syndication for Educators
A learning theory that argues effective learning is promoted by constructing knowledge in groups.
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Promoting Cultural Competence, Equity, Inclusion, and Social Justice in Higher Education With Ludic Pedagogies: The Establishment of Authentic Meaning Making
Social constructivism posits that all knowledge develops as a result of social interaction and language use, and is therefore a shared and collective, experience rather than an individual one.
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Communicative Networking and Linguistic Mashups on Web 2.0
Social constructivism is a theory of learning which draws heavily on the work of the Soviet psychologist Lev Vygotsky (1896-1934 AU29: The in-text citation "Lev Vygotsky (1896-1934" is not in the reference list. Please correct the citation, add the reference to the list, or delete the citation. ). It suggests that learners add to and reshape their mental models of reality through social collaboration, building new understandings as they actively engage in learning experiences. Scaffolding, or guidance, is provided by teachers or more experienced peers in the learner’s zone of proximal development, that is, the zone between what a learner can achieve independently and what s/he may achieve with support.
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Innovative Practices in Primary and Secondary School Learning Environments
A theory of learning that sets out learning is socially constructed and supported by the use of tools.
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Active Learning and Its Implementation for Teaching
Social constructivism suggests that learners learn concepts or construct meaning about ideas through their interaction with others, with their world, and through interpretations of that world by actively constructing meaning. Learners construct knowledge or understanding as a result of active learning, thinking and doing in social contexts.
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Primary Pre-Service Teacher Changing Perspectives About Integrated STEAM Approach
Learning is socially situated, and knowledge is constructed based on previous experiences through interaction with others.
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The Strategic Address of Marginalisation in Higher Education: Pedagogical Approaches to the Integration of LEGO® SERIOUS PLAY®
Social constructivism posits that all knowledge develops as a result of social interaction and language use, and is therefore a shared and collective experience rather than an individual one.
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Writing and Young English Language Learners: Identity, Subjectivity, and Agency
Lev Vigotysky’s (1978) perspective on how knowledge was developed through active engagement within the social context through social interactions.
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Online Community Projects and Post-Pandemic EFL Curricula in Secondary Schools
A pedagogical theory that regards learning as social interaction, negotiation, and evaluation processes. For this reason, social constructivist lessons are learner-centred, with the teacher acting as a facilitator rather than an instructor. Skills and understanding take precedence over content and memory.
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Course Management Meets Social Networking in Moodle
Learning theory that states that learners learn best when functioning as a social group that collaboratively constructs a shared culture of artifacts with shared meanings.
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Publishing as Pedagogy: Reflections on Innovating in the Ivory Tower
A theory of learning which argues that individuals learn through the support and collaboration of others ( Vygotsky, 1978 ).
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Methadone Referrals Demystified: A Client's Journey Into Methadone Treatment – Social Constructivism and the Use of Video-Based Content in Medical Provider Education
A learning theory developed by Russian psychologist Lev Vygotsky, which presupposes that students learn through social interactions and are active participants in the creation of their knowledge.
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Scaffolding Undergraduate STEM Majors: A Strategic Mentoring Program
A theory of learning which expounds knowledge is constructed through interaction and negotiation among people under social cultural environment.
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Cross-Border Collaborative Learning in the Professional Development of Teachers: Case Study – Online Course for the Professional Development of Teachers in a Digital Age
Sociological theory of knowledge that applies the general philosophical constructivism into the social context. According to this theory reality is constructed through human activity, knowledge is a human product and is socially and culturally constructed, individuals create meaning through their interactions with each other and with the environment they live. (Based on Wikipedia).
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Towards a Framework for Evaluating ICT-Based Materials
Assigns a leading role to individuals’ activity in the learning process, unlike previous educational theories mostly based on the passive and receptive role of the learner. It also recognizes the great importance of the symbol systems, such as language, logic, and mathematical systems, which are inherited by the learner as a member of a particular culture.
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Supporting and Facilitating Pedagogical Creativity With Gamification: Democracy, Agency, and Choice
Social constructivism posits that all knowledge develops as a result of social interaction and language use, and is therefore a shared and collective, experience rather than an individual one.
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Comparative and Evaluative Study of Free Learning Management Systems
Is centered on the learner. The learner learns through its representations. The construction of knowledge although personal is carried out in a social setting. The context and come from both what we think and what others bring as interactions.
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Digital and Collaborative Work: Winning Couple?
Learning through social interactions between learners intended by a modification of a previous learning or reorganizing a basic structure.
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Understanding Culturally Responsive Play Through Drama-Based Pedagogy
A learning theory that suggests knowledge is built and understood through interactions with one another.
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Engaging Counseling Students in Sustainable Advocacy
Social constructivism's basic tenet is that human learning and knowledge are formed via social interaction and are shared experiences rather than solitary ones.
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Pedagogy Reconsidered in a Multimodal Blended Environment
Associated with Lev Vygotsky, the theory that all knowledge was mediated through its social or cultural context
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E-Social Constructivism and Collaborative E-Learning
An educational theory based on the principle that learners and teachers coconstruct knowledge through social processes.
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Picturing the Future by Framing the Past: Approaches to Contemporary CPD
Social constructivism places strategic emphasis on the collaborative nature of learning as a social experience. It is based on the premise that knowledge is a byproduct of the interaction of people within their different cultures and contexts and the societies to which they belong. Metaphorically knowledge building can be represented by bricks, where students learn from others and construct their own knowledge and reality.
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Philosophy, Theory, and Praxis: Gamification Pedagogy in Global Higher Education
Social constructivism posits that all knowledge develops as a result of social interaction and language use, and is therefore a shared and collective, experience rather than an individual one.
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The Power of Metaphor in Bringing Clarity for Learners in Learner-Centered Design
Social constructivism believe that a learner’s ability to learn relies to a large extent on what he already knows and understands, and the acquisition of knowledge should be an individually tailored process of construction. Transformative learning theory focuses upon the often necessary change that is required in a learner’s preconceptions and world view.
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Strategies for Next Generation Networks Architectures
Founded in principles of constructivism, and developed by Lev Vygotsky, social constructivism emphasises the collaborative nature of learning. Social constructivism emphasises the role of language and culture in cognitive development.
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Translanguaging and Codeswitching in a Multicultural Classroom: Experiences of University of Namibia Lecturers
This refers to a collaborative way of acquiring knowledge in a social context as people interacts. The social constructivism is one of the teaching and learning strategy that promotes effective learning and teaching when students interact with their peers.
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Triple Selves at Work: Immigrant Muslim Women Navigating Careers in America
A paradigm or a set of beliefs asserting that reality is constructed mutually and relationally in a sociocultural context, emphasizing multiple ways of knowing and accepting the existence of multiple truths.
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Connecting Higher Education Learning Spaces in a Blended Zululand Teaching and Learning Ecology
Learning and teaching is a collective process in which we are both teachers and learners at the same time and are thus better able to understand the information we have constructed by ourselves.
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Humanizing Online Assessment: Screencasting as a Multimedia Feedback Tool for First Generation College Students
A learning theory that promotes the concept that learning is social and that learning occurs through building upon previous schema/experiences.
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Defining Quality Standards, Guidelines, and Strategies for the Delivery of Successful Online Education in a Changing Society
A theory proposed by Vygotsky that emphasizes the critical importance of the social context for cognitive development.
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State-of-the-Art E-Learning Platforms Intended for Teaching and Learning
Is centered on the learner. The learner learns through its representations. The construction of knowledge although personal is carried out in a social setting. The context and come from both what we think and what others bring as interactions.
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The Significance of Collective Self-Directed Learning Competencies for the Sustainability of Higher Education
A school of thought that maintains that individuals do not learn alone but as part of a larger group engaging with the subject matter.
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Designing Tools and Activities for Educational Robotics in Online Learning
A learning theory that foresees that children construct knowledge through their interactions with teachers and peers.
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Writing Center Discourses in Theory and Practice: A Comparative Case Study
A body of work that emphasizes the collaborative and social nature of knowledge production.
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Translator Education and Metacognition: Towards Student-Centered Approaches to Translator Education
As a theory of learning, social constructivism emphasizes the role of culture and socialization in the cognitive development of individuals. Growing up within a human group, the family or a professional community of practice such as professional translators, individuals acquire the cognitive tools and knowledge shared by the community. The cognitive tools individuals get from the community should allow them to construct new knowledge on the basis of knowledge previously acquired.
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Indicators for Cooperative, Online-Based Learning and Their Role in Quality Management of Online Learning
A theory of knowledge according to which learning is socially situated and knowledge is constructed through interaction with others.
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Inclusive Frameworks in Online STEM Teaching and Learning
Social constructivism posits that all knowledge develops as a result of social interaction and language use and is therefore a shared and collective experience rather than an individual one.
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Seismic Shifts in the Online Learning Environment in Higher Education
An educational theory that asserts that knowledge and understanding are actively created and shaped through social interactions.
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From Error Analysis to Effective Writing Outputs: An EAP Process-Oriented and Social-Constructivist Perspective
An approach that learning is an active process by which learners actively create meaning out of knowledge, unlike a passive orientation in which they are merely handed information.
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Inside, Outside, and Off-Site: Social Constructivism in Mobile Games
A theory of learning mainly associated with Vygotsky that emphasizes intrinsic learning through social interactions.
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Critical Conceptualization of Women's Entrepreneurship: Reflections on the Turkish Entrepreneurship Ecosystem
Is epistemological perspective argues that reality is not a phenomenon waiting to be discovered but is created in a meaningful social interaction.
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Computer-Mediated Communication Learning Environments: The Social Dimension
Social constructivism emphasizes the importance of culture and context in the process of knowledge construction. Learning is meant to be a social process that occurs when individuals take part in social activities. Instructional models based on this perspective stress the need for collaboration among learners and with practitioners in society.
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Life Has Equal Worth: Inclusion in High Schools
A philosophy which argues that learning is a social activity and emphasizes that learners should be active participants in the creation of knowledge.
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Lessons Learned from Semiotics: Social and Cultural Landmarks for Transformative Elearning
A theory of how social phenomena develops within cultural and specific social situations. Social constructivism is the product or artifact of each society or civilization.
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Fielduino (Digital Farming): Design of an Open Agricultural Platform
Social constructivism is a learning theory according to which, students must construct knowledge through a cooperative process.
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Caring in the Zone: Fostering Relationships in Virtual Learning Communities
A philosophical position which holds that knowledge is created culturally, socially and within communities.
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Extending the Strategic Reach and Impact of Healthcare Professional CPD: Constructively Aligned and Theoretically Underpinned
Social constructivism places strategic emphasis on the collaborative nature of learning as a social experience. It is based on the premise that knowledge is a byproduct of the interaction of people within their different cultures and contexts and the societies to which they belong. Metaphorically knowledge building can be represented by bricks, where students learn from others and construct their own knowledge and reality.
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Constructing Knowledge through Online Bulletin Board Discussions
Shares most of Piaget’s views but puts more emphasis on the impact of the social context of learning. Lev Vygotsky, the proponent of social constructivist theory, stresses that social environment plays a crucial role in children’s development and acquisition of knowledge.
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Educational Modeling of a New Smart Learning Management System
Is centered on the learner. The learner learns through its representations. The construction of knowledge although personal is carried out in a social setting. The context and come from both what we think and what others bring as interactions.
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Bridging the Gulf Between the Campus and Workplace: The Role of English-Oriented Student Bodies
A theory in psychology which suggests that individuals are molded by the society around them, rather than being innately pre-disposed in any one direction.
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Knowledge Acquisition in a Hybrid Graduate Teacher Training Program
A theory in which an individual acquires new knowledge through social engagements.
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Mathematics, Computer Mathematical Systems, Creativity, Art
Constructivism is an epistemology, a learning or meaning-making theory, which offers an explanation of the nature of knowledge and how human beings learn. It maintains that individuals create or construct their own new understandings or knowledge through the interaction of what they already know and believe and the ideas, events, and activities with which they come in contact (Cannella & Reiff, 1994; Richardson, 1997). Knowledge is acquired through involvement with content instead of imitation or repetition (Kroll & LaBoskey, 1996). Learning activities in constructivist settings are characterized by active engagement, inquiry, problem solving, and collaboration with others. Rather than a dispenser of knowledge, the teacher is a guide, facilitator, and co-explorer who encourages learners to question, challenge, and formulate their own ideas, opinions, and conclusions. “Correct” answers and single interpretations are de-emphasized. http://www.ericdigests.org/1999-3/theory.htm
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The Toolbox: Objects and Tools for Doing Mathematics
A theory of knowledge that argues that humans generate knowledge and meaning from an interaction between their experiences and their ideas.
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Using UDL in Graduate Programs in Education to Erode Pedagogical Tension and Contradictions: Doing What We Preach
A theoretical paradigm which argues that knowledge is constructed by the learner – not transferred by the educator - but that it is shaped in a social context, through a process of dialogue, exchange, and collaboration with peers. The educator acts as a facilitator who can, in particular, encourage the learners to collectively progress in their curiosity towards the zone of proximal development – a space of learning which is not familiar to them, but which can be accessed without excessive struggle.
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Meeting Students Where They Are: Collaborating With Non-Traditional Departments on Campus
An idea that students learn better when they develop knowledge together, since learning and knowledge depend on shared understandings.
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