Články / studijní materiály/autorské práce

Constructivism, Cybernetics, and Information Processing: Implications for Technologies of Research on Learning / Thompson, Patrick W.

In: Constructivism in Education, ed. By L.P. Steffe and J. Gale, Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Publishers. - s. 123-133. - 1995

Constructivism, as a philosophical orientation, has only been widely accepted in mathematics and science education since the early 1980s. As it became more broadly accepted, it also became clear that there were incongruous images of it. In 1984, von Glasersfeld introduced a distinction, echoed in Steier's chapter 5, between what he called naive constructivism and radical constructivism. At the risk of oversiinplification, suffice it to say that naive constructivism is the acceptance that learners construct their own knowledge, whereas radical constructivism is the acceptance that naive constructivism applies to everyone-researchers and philosophers included. von Glasersfeld's distinction had a pejorative ring to it and rightly so. Unreflective acceptance of naive constructivism easily became dogmatic ideology, which had, and continues to have, many unwanted consequences.(1) On the other hand, I attempt to make a case that to do research, we must spend a good part of our time acting as naive constructivists, even when operating within a radical constructivist or ecological constructionist framework. The orientation I have in mind is not unreflexive, therefore I call it utilitarian constructivism, and use the chapters by Steier and Spiro et al. (chaps. 5 and 6, respectively) as starting points in its explication.

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Constructivism: A ‘Next’ Area of Scientific Development? / Zeeuw, Gerard de

In: Foundations of Science, special issue on "The Impact of Radical Constructivism on Science", edited by A. Riegler. - Roč. 6, č. 1-3, s. 77-98. - 2001

Radical Constructivism has been defined as an ‘unconventional approach to the problem of knowledge and knowing’. Its unconventionality is summarised by its claim that it is impossible to attribute unique meaning to experience-as no mind-independent yardstick can be assumed to exist against which to identify uniqueness, and hence to produce knowledge and knowing. In other words, it is claimed that there is no ‘reality’ that is knowable to all individual knowers.

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The Constructivist Approach to Teaching / Glasersfeld, Ernst von

In: P. Steffe and J. Gale Eds. Constructivism in Education. - s. 3-15. - 1995

The development of a constructivist theory of knowing has been the focus of my interest for several decades. It was a philosophical interest that arose originally out of work concerning first the structure and semantics of several languages and later cognitive psychology. Therefore, the title of this chapter may need an explanation. Rosalind Driver, Reinders Duit, Heinrich Bauersfeld, and Paul Cobb can speak about teaching from their own immediate experiences, whereas I have never taught any of the subjects in which readers are experts. When I focus on the theory of constructivism, one may wonder why a proponent of such a peculiar theory of knowing should have anything to say about education in mathematics or science. It is a question I have often asked myself. If all goes well, some justification will be seen at the end of my essay.

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Články / studijní materiály/autorské práce

Constructivist learning theory to web-based course design:
 An instructional design approach / Daley, Barbara J. -- Conceição-Runlee, Simone

With the advent of web-based courses and distance education technology, it is necessary to carefully consider how the use of this technology fosters the learning intended in adult education programs. In this paper, we have outlined constructivist learning theory as an approach to fostering web-based course development. A constructivist approach allows both learners and facilitators to take advantage of the World Wide Web, because the theory focuses on making connections and making meaning in the learning process. Web-based courses that are designed with a constructivist approach encourage the learners to navigate, create, and construct their unique knowledge base.

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The Constructivist View of Communication / Glasersfeld, Ernst von

In: A.Müller & K.Müller, Eds. An unfinished revolution?. - - 2007

Heinz von Foerster had a knack for statements that sounded paradoxical. In fact, they made a lot of sense when they were unpacked. At the very beginning of our joint recollections in “Wie wir uns erfinden”, a book we published together a few years ago, he said for example: “It’s the listener, not the speaker, who determines the meaning of an utterance.”

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Constructs and trinities: kelly and varela on complementarity and knowledge / Chiari, Gabriele -- Nuzzo, M. Laura

In: The Seventh International Congress on Personal Construct Psychology, Memphis, TN, August 5th-9th. - - 1987

The paper is aimed at showing similarities and differences between the views of complementarity in relation to the creation and structure of cognitive systems held by George A. Kelly and Francisco J. Varela, both of them sharing a constructivist metatheory. Though operating in different times and in different fields (psychology and biology), their notions of construct and trinity, respectively, represent a similar departure from classical logic and dialectics, and lead to similar implications as to the problem of knowledge and the hierarchical structure of cognitive systems. Even if, because of their different views on the dependence/independence of reality from the observer's act of construing, Kelly's constructivism can be considered as trivial and Varela's constructivism as radical, the triviality of the former is questioned.

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Contrasting four family therapy paradigms: implication for family therapy training / Israelstam, Ken

In: Journal of Family Therapy. - Roč. 10, č. 2, s. 179 -196. - 1988

Four major paradigms of family therapy are, contrasted: affective-experiential, structural, atrategic and Milan.

Hesla: rodinná terapie ; systémový přístup

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Články / studijní materiály/autorské práce

The contribution of Humberto Maturana 
to the sciences of complexity and psychology / Ruiz, Alfredo B.

In: Journal of Constructivist Psychology. - č. 9, s. 283-302. - 1996

This work attempts to present the most important contributions of Humberto R. Maturana to the field of psychology, in an effort to reveal them directly. The main conclusion is that Maturana has expanded the understanding of humanness and therapy through the biology of the observer.

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Social Construction and Relationism: A Conversation with Kenneth Gergen / Aceros, Juan C

In: Universitas Psychologica, Barcelona. - Roč. 11, č. 3, - 2012

Kenneth Gergen is one of the most widely known contributors to social constructionist thought in the world today. Since the publication of his paper “Social Psychology as History” he has become a central player in what is known as the Social Psychology Crisis.

Hesla: konstrukcionismus

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Články / sam

On Importance of Keeping It Simple and Taking the Patient Seriously: Conversation with Steve de Shazer and John Weeakland / Hoyt, Michael

The following conversation took place during the afternoon of December 3. 1992, in Phoenix, Arizona, where we were all participating in the Fifth Interanational Congres on Ericksonian Approaches to Hypnosis and Psychotherapy.

Hesla: interview ; krátká terapie ; psychoterapie

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