the poor scholar:questioning constructivism

16
“ROMANCING A GENERATION?” The Poor Scholar:Questioning Constructivism By Susan Holden, Mark Lloyd, Jennifer Nicholson, Eric McIntyre, Huguette Poirier and Julie Stewart

Upload: vidal

Post on 24-Feb-2016

23 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

The Poor Scholar:Questioning Constructivism. “Romancing A Generation?”. By Susan Holden, Mark Lloyd, Jennifer Nicholson, Eric McIntyre, Huguette Poirier and Julie Stewart. " The central educational fallacy of our time: that one can think without having anything to think about." - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: The Poor Scholar:Questioning Constructivism

“ROMANCING A GENERATION?”

The Poor Scholar:Questioning

Constructivism

By Susan Holden, Mark Lloyd, Jennifer Nicholson,Eric McIntyre, Huguette Poirier and Julie Stewart

Page 2: The Poor Scholar:Questioning Constructivism

"The central educational fallacy of our time:that one can think without having anything to think about."

- Heather Mac Donald

Page 3: The Poor Scholar:Questioning Constructivism

Kids Can’t Read or do Math, but they still feel really good about themselves

Page 4: The Poor Scholar:Questioning Constructivism

One Cynic’s Testimony:

Hirsh (2001) As a society, we've been chasing the chimera of progressive education through most of the 20th century, and now it's come home with a vengeance. Points to consider:

Page 5: The Poor Scholar:Questioning Constructivism

# 1

We have kids who can't read or spell very well, can't multiply or make change without a calculator, can't form logical arguments and can't think coherently, who don't know the difference between the Civil War and the American Revolution, never heard of the Reformation or the Enlightenment, and who haven't a clue what Charlemagne, Newton, Jefferson or Dickens did.

Page 6: The Poor Scholar:Questioning Constructivism

# 2

They can't sit still because no one ever told them to just sit down and listen, they can't think or work independently because they've been depending on their collaborative workgroups since Kindergarten, and they don't know how to ask questions because they have little experience in dealing with definite factual answers

Page 7: The Poor Scholar:Questioning Constructivism

# 3

Later in life, they take vacations to places they can't find on a map.

Page 8: The Poor Scholar:Questioning Constructivism

But they do have terrific self-esteem, a sense of entitlement, and have been romanced into thinking the real world will make allowances for them.

Page 9: The Poor Scholar:Questioning Constructivism

'Trouble at the Happiest School on Earth.'

"According to the New York Times, the Disney school was to follow the 'most advanced' progressive educational methods. ... Such methods, although they have been in use for decades, have rarely worked well. The Celebration School was no exception. The Times article began, 'The start of the school year here is just a few days away, so it was no surprise that there was a line of parents at the Celebration School office the other day. But the reason for the line was: they were queuing up to withdraw their children.' Parents said they were dissatisfied with the lack of clear academic goals and measures of achievement, as well as with the lack of order and structure that accompanied the progressive methods.“ (Hirsch 2001)

Page 10: The Poor Scholar:Questioning Constructivism

Further Research to refute constructivism

One researcher believes memorization has become archaic and has more or less been fully replaced by a more constructivist approach. Michael Knox-Baren (2004) stated “...if there’s one thing progressive educators don’t like it’s rote learning. As a result, we now have several generations of Americans who’ve never memorized much of anything. Even highly educated people in their thirties and forties are often unable to recite half a dozen lines of classic poetry or prose.”

Page 11: The Poor Scholar:Questioning Constructivism

Blog post from Michael Kaechele from Michigan,US, a teacher in a problem based learning school “Is rote memorization a 21st Century skill? One of the things that has amazed me in my 5 years of teaching a Grade 6 math-focused technology class is how many kids do not know the answer to simple math problems like 3 x 7. They want to use a calculator for basic math facts.”

Page 12: The Poor Scholar:Questioning Constructivism

Not totally against it but raises a good point:

Kirshner, Sweller, Clark (2006) The advantage of guidance begins to recede only when learners have sufficiently high prior knowledge to provide “internal” guidance.

Basically, the research indicates that 21st century classrooms may need a marriage of both inquiry and memorization/coverage and that “The Scholar’s Soliloquy”-with its irony and humour- is indeed still relevant for our professional reflection.

Page 13: The Poor Scholar:Questioning Constructivism

What do we know about constructivism?

Phye (1997) states that constructivism is a movement that combines cognition from a developmental perspective with other important issues, such as motivation, self-directed learning, and a focus on the social context of learning.

Page 14: The Poor Scholar:Questioning Constructivism

What do we know about the student?

Little confidence in his ability to do school workNot motivated in schoolRepeated grade 7Interested in mechanicsAble to read a mapAble to write bills and lettersPracticalWants to be a good citizen

Page 15: The Poor Scholar:Questioning Constructivism

Suggestions :

Allowing independence and opportunities to take initiativeProviding hand-on activitiesLink learning to real life possibilitiesBuilding on students’ prior-knowledgeEncouraging discussion with teacher and other studentsAsking open-ended questionsAllowing response timeEncouraging inquiry-base learningFlexibility in lessonUsing precise words such as create, predict, classify and

analyseEncouraging exploration and questioning of hypotheses