Christian Learning Center › Forums › Discussion Forum › Have you in your own education, your children’s education, or in a school you’ve taught at experienced a constructivist approach to education? If so, describe some of the impact (positive or negative) you experienced/witnessed.
Tagged: CE202-10
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Have you in your own education, your children’s education, or in a school you’ve taught at experienced a constructivist approach to education? If so, describe some of the impact (positive or negative) you experienced/witnessed.
Deleted User replied 4 months ago 92 Members · 93 Replies
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Deleted User
Deleted User06/25/2024 at 17:21I taught at a Montessori school for a few years and my son attended one for some time as well. At the Montessori school my son attended, they incorporated a Constructivism approach by giving a set amount of choices in the day, but the child still engaged in the task of their choice. I try to use flexibility in my own teaching and utilize hands on learning centers as often as I can. I try to prioritize my student’s love of learning so they are motivated to learn and grow.
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Deleted User
Deleted User06/25/2024 at 14:16I have not ever experienced this kind of approach. I think it could be good to a degree, but the students must be held to some set standard of learning which this approach would not provide.
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Deleted User
Deleted User06/24/2024 at 02:35Hands-on learning is great and instead of direct instruction, giving students the ability to discover the truth on their own without spoon-feeding them is great. With the correct guidance it can be incredibly effect. However, there is also a matter of time and with all the content needing to be covered we cannot do this for everything. However, letting the students decide what is important and giving students too much power when they are young, immature and not knowledgeable enough to make such decisions is not wise on a part of the school or educational system in general.
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Deleted User
Deleted User06/21/2024 at 15:12I have not had any experience with this type of education. I can see how it could be fun, but students can miss out on a lot of important information.
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Deleted User
Deleted User06/20/2024 at 16:32I have not experienced this in my educational experience, most of which has been in a private Christian school setting. I agree with the lesson that overall, a constructivist approach is not the best, and that adults should be leading the classroom. While we should encourage students to explore and discover areas of interest, the community as a whole is far too concerned with the individual as opposed to the community. As Christian educators, we should teach students that while God cares for us as individuals, He also created us to be in a body and should be concerned with working together.