Constructivist Teaching
Constructivist Teaching
Constructivist Teaching
TEACHING
Interactive, Collaborative, Integrative and Inquiry-based
Constructivist teaching is based on the belief that
learning occurs when learners are actively involved
in the process of meaning and knowledge
construction as opposed to passively receiving
information.
Features of Constructivist
Teaching
Authentic activities and real-word environments
Multiple perspectives
Wholistic, integrative
Self-directed learners
Meaningful Learners
Characteristics of Constructivist
Teaching
INTERACTIVE
TEACHING
Learning is an active process.
Learning is also a social process.
Every student can serve as a resource person.
Collaborative Learning
Teacher must:
Begin with the conviction that every student can share something in
the attainment of a goal.
Structure tasks in such a way that the group goal cannot be realized
without the members collaborating.
Make the goal clear to all.
Ensure that guidelines on procedures are clear especially on how their
performance is assessed.
Must make clear that at the end of the activity, they have to reflect
together.
Teacher’s Tasks in Collaborative
Teaching
INTEGRATIVE
TEACHING
Integrate comes from the Latin word “integer”
which means to make whole. Integrative teaching and
learning means putting together separate disciplines
to make whole. This affirms the “boundarylessness” of
disciplines. There are no demarcation lines among
disciplines taught.
Interdisciplinary Teaching
Integrative teaching is also transdisciplinary. This
means connecting lifeless subject matter to life itself.
When the subject matter gets connected to real life, it
becomes alive and interesting.
How can teachers connect subject matter to life?
Depart from teaching content for test purposes only.
Reach the application phase of lesson development.
Transdisciplinary Teaching
In the 3-level teaching approach, you teach as planned,
either deductively or inductively, but cap your teaching with
value level teaching. Connect your cognitive or skill lesson
with value teaching. In fact, it is only when you give your
lesson an affective or value dimension that your lesson
becomes meaningful because that is when we connect cold
subject matter with warm-blooded people.
The three-level teaching is teaching information for
formation and transformation.
Three-level Teaching
If integrative teaching is making things whole, it also
means putting together the multiple intelligences (MI) of
the learner as identified by Howard Gardner. It is also
considering varied learning styles (LS). This does not
mean, however, that you will be overwhelmed with 9
different ways of teaching content at one time by making
use of a variety of teaching activities to cater to these MIs
and LSs.
Inquiry-based teaching
In a knowledge economy, knowing has shifted from being able to
remember and repeat information to being able to find and use it. The
capital is intellectual-knowledge. Therefore, students must be taught to
nurture inquiring attitudes necessary to continue the generation and
examination of knowledge throughout their lives. The skills and the
ability to continue learning should be the most important outcomes of
teaching and learning.
Besides, with knowledge explosion it is impossible to teach all the
information we want to each students. Teach them instead how to look
for and evaluate information.