SEYMOUR PAPERT & CONSTRUCTIONISM |
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Constructionism |
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"Constructionism,
a theory pioneered by Seymour Papert of the MIT Media Lab, holds that
children learn best when they are in the active role of the designer and
constructor. But the theory goes a step further. Constructionism, Papert
says, adds "is the idea that this happens especially felicitously in a
context where the learner is consciously engaged in constructing a public
entity, whether it's a sand castle on the beach or a theory of the
universe." See
source "But
it is not only in the constructing of something that leaning becomes truly
meaningful for the learner. That creation process and the end product must
be shared with others in order for the full effects of
Constructionist learning to take root. We all have times when we need
to explain something we know to someone else. To do this, we may have to bone
up on the subject, talk with others, draw diagrams. In this process, we learn
our subject well because we have to think hard about it and think of the best
ways to convey it to others. It is through this creation of an object -- ...
it could be a website or computer program -- that is shared with others and
becomes what Papert calls a "public entity" that Constructionist
learning is so powerfully reinforced." See
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