Situated Learning Flashcards
1
Q
what are the main theories of situated learning
A
- behaviourism: measurable change in observable behaviour (product)
- cognitivism: meaning making process inside the head of individual learners (process, conceptual growth)
- constructivism: active construction of personal meaning and understandings (independent process) + social learning
- situated learning: learning is ‘situated’ in the context of social practice in which it has meaning
2
Q
how can we learn via participation
A
learning cannot be seen as an individual, internal, cognitive process but as a social activity that takes place in a complex socio-cultural world
3
Q
what are the situated perspectives on learning
A
- situated theorists locate learning in social practice, a process that is part of all human activities, as individuals interact and engage actively in a range of social practices in historical and social contexts that give meaning to what they do
- the ‘situatedness’ of learning means merely that learning takes place in particular sets of circumstances, in time and space
- ‘the physical and social contexts in which an activity takes place are an integral part of the activity, and of the learning that takes place within it’
- ‘how a person learns a particular set of knowledge and skills, and the situation in which a person learns, are a fundamental part of what is learned’
- there is both in school and out of school learning
- researchers and psychologists observed that in many cases students in schools learned specific skills or knowledge that could not be used outside of school context
4
Q
what are the implications for practioners
A
- identify what is to be learned
- consider the ‘real’ world situations in which this learning is to be used
- select to get the learners engaged in those practices and activities that are consistent with the practices of the real world
- recontextualise authentic learning opportunities