Lesson 11:
The Computer as the
Teacher’s Tool
Constructivism
was introduced by Jean 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 is the effort to show that the construction
of knowledge is governed by social, historical and cultural contexts. In
effect, this is to say 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 suggested the interactive process in learning. A more capable adult (teacher or parent) can aid or complement what the learner sees in a given tasks or project. In addition, John Dewey sees language as 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.
The Computer’s 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 computer has
been used in communication as evident by social networking sites as to
facebook, twitter and friendster. We can even chat/talk friends and families
anywhere in the globe through yahoo messenger or the one in facebook or view
them through the webcam. We can send messages and information through the internet
in just seconds or minutes.
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 desktop publishing software that allows users 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. One way of co-construction 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.
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 a situating tool
which places the user in simulated flying environment.
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