2. “ Teaching is not about filling up the pail, it is
about lighting a fire”
Constructivism: focuses on knowledge
construction .It is a theory of knowledge that
argues that humans generate knowledge and
meaning from an interaction between their
experiences and their ideas
3. 2 views of constructivism
• Individual constructivism
• Social constructivism
6. Characteristics of constructivism
1. Learners construct understanding
2. New learning depends on current
understanding
3. Learning is facilitated by social interaction
4. Meaningful learning occurs within
authentic learning tasks.
7. Organizing knowledge
Concepts: a concept is a way of grouping or
categorizing objects or events in our mind.
• Concepts as feature lists –learning a concept
involves learning specific features that characterize
positive instance of the concept
a. Defining feature- characteristic present in ALL
instances
b. correlational feature-present in many positive
instances but not essential for concept membership
8. • Concepts as prototypes – prototype is an idea
or visual image of a “typical example. It is
usually formed based on the positive
instances that learners encounter most often.
• Concepts as exemplars – exemplars represent
a variety of examples. It allows learners to
know that an example under a concept may
have variability
9. • Making concept-learning effective
a) Provide a clear definition of the concept
b) Make the defining features very concrete and
prominent
c) Give a variety of positive instances
d) Give negative instances
e) Cite a “best example” or a prototype
f) Provide opportunity for learners to identify
positive and negative instances
g) Ask learners to think of their own example of
the concept
h) Point out how concepts can be related to each
other
10. • Schemas and scripts
-schema is an organized body of knowledge
about something
-script is a schema that includes a series of
predictable events about a specific activity.
11. Applying constructivism in facilitating
learning
• Aim to make learners understand a few key ideas in
an in-depth manner, rather than taking up so many
topics superficially.
• Give varied examples
• Provide opportunities for experimentation
• Provide lots of opportunities for quality interaction
• Have lots of hands-on activities
• Relate your topic to real life situations
• Do not depend on the explanation method all the
time.