Lesson 11: The Computer as the Teacher`s Tool
In this lesson, we shall again look at the computer, but this time from another perspective, the computer as the teacher’s handy-tool. It can in fact support the constructivist and social constructivist paradigms of constructivist learning.
Constructivist was introduced by Piaget (1981) and Bruner (1990). They
gave stress to knowledge discovery of new meaning/concepts/principles in the
learning process. Various strategies have been suggested to foster knowledge
discovery, among these, is making students engaged in gathering unorganized
information from which they can induce ideas and principles. Students are also
asked to apply discovered knowledge to new situations, a process for making
their knowledge applicable to real life situations.
While
knowledge is constructed by the individual learner in constructivism, knowledge
can also be socially constructed. Social constructivism. This is an effort to
show that the construction of knowledge is governed by social, historical and
cultural contexts. In effect, this is to ay that the learner who interprets
knowledge has a predetermined point of view according to the social
perspectives of the community or society he lives in.
The psychologist Vygotsky stressed that learning is affected by social influences. He therefore suggested the interactive process in learning. The more capable adult (teacher or parent) or classmate can aid or complement what the learner sees in a given class project. In addition, Dewey sees language as a medium for social coordination and adaptation. For Dewey human learning is really human languaging that occurs when students socially share, build and agree upon meanings and knowledge.
A Summary of the Two Learning Perspectives
Learning Framework
|
Constructivism
|
Social Constructivism
|
Assumption
|
Knowledge is constructed
by the individual.
|
Knowledge is constructed
within a social context.
|
Definition of Learning
|
Students build their own
learning.
|
Students build knowledge
influenced by the social context.
|
Learning Strategies
|
Gather unorganized
information to create new concept/principle
|
Exchange and share from
ideas, stimulates thinking.
|
General Orientation
|
Personal discovery of
knowledge.
|
Students discuss and
discover meanings
|
Example
|
8*5-8+8+8+8+8
|
Two alternative job offers
option 1-8 hrs/day for 6days/week
Option 2-9 hrs/day for 5
days/week
|
Bruner Constructivism in Education
THE COMPUTER CAPABILITIES
Informative Tool
The computer can provide vast amounts of information in
various forms, such as text, graphics, sound and video. Even multimedia
encyclopedias are today available on the internet.
The
internet itself provides and enormous database from which user can access
global information resources that includes the latest news, weather forecasts,
airline schedule, sports development, entertainment news and features, as well
as educational information directly useful to learners. The internet on
education can be sourced for kinds of educational resources on the internet.
Along the
constructivist point of view, it is not enough for learners to download
relevant information using the computer as an information tool. Students can
use gathered information for composition or presentation projects as may be
assigned by the teacher. Given the fact that the internet can serve as a
channel for global communication, the computer can very well be the key tool
for video teleconferencing sessions.
Constructive Tool
The computer itself can be used for manipulating information;
visualizing one’s understanding and building new knowledge. The Microsoft Word
computer program itself is a desktop publishing software that allows uses to
organize and present their ideas in attractive formats.
Co-constructive Tool
Students can use constructive tools to work cooperatively
and construct a shared understanding of new knowledge. On ways of
co-constructive is the use of the electronic whiteboard where students may post
notices to a shared document/whiteboard. Students may also co-edit the same
document from their homes.
The
Computer-Supported International Learning Environments (CSILE) is an example of
an integrated environment developed by the Ontario Institute for studied in
Education. Within CSILE, students can enter their ideas in notes and respond to
each other’s ideas.
Manifest in the student-generated database are higher level
thinking processes-explaining,problem solving/finding,expertise and development, literacy improvement.
Situating Tool
By means of virtual reality (RS) extension systems, the
computer can create 3-D images on display to give the user the feeling that are
situated in a virtual environment. A flight simulation program is an example of
situating tool which places the user in a simulated flying environment.
Multi-User
domains or Dungeons (MUDs) MUD Object Oriented (MOOs), and Multi-User Shared
hallucination (MUSHs) are example of situating systems MUDs and MOOs are
text-based virtual reality environments on the Internet. When users log on to a
MOO environment, they may interact with the virtual reality (such as by writing
on a notice board) through simple text based commands. A school-to-school or
classroom-to-classroom environment is possible whereby the user can choose to
talk around the campus, talk with other users who are logged to the same site.
To caution
users, the computer as a situating tool is news and still undergoing further
research and development.
Reflection
The computer serves as a teacher's tool in the sense that the educators used computers as their instructional materials in supplementing the cognitive development of learners when it comes to technology. Computer has a great help for both the teachers and the learners, for the teachers it facilitate their instructional methods and improve their instructional materials; for the learners it contributes a lot in their cognitive development and learning experiences.
Credits
http://www.duluth.umn.edu/~hrallis/guides/computerideas.html
http://www.education.pitt.edu/EducationalResources/Teachers/LEADERS/FrequentlyAskedQuestionsFAQ/UsingComputersandtheInternetforTeaching.aspx
http://dwb4.unl.edu/Diss/SGay/SGayDiss.html
http://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED273556
Reflection
The computer serves as a teacher's tool in the sense that the educators used computers as their instructional materials in supplementing the cognitive development of learners when it comes to technology. Computer has a great help for both the teachers and the learners, for the teachers it facilitate their instructional methods and improve their instructional materials; for the learners it contributes a lot in their cognitive development and learning experiences.
Credits
http://www.duluth.umn.edu/~hrallis/guides/computerideas.html
http://www.education.pitt.edu/EducationalResources/Teachers/LEADERS/FrequentlyAskedQuestionsFAQ/UsingComputersandtheInternetforTeaching.aspx
http://dwb4.unl.edu/Diss/SGay/SGayDiss.html
http://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED273556