1 / 39

Content Matters: Towards a Symbiosis of General and Domain-Specific Theories of Learning and Instruction

Content Matters: Towards a Symbiosis of General and Domain-Specific Theories of Learning and Instruction. Paul Cobb Vanderbilt University Nashville, USA. Top Down Relation Between Theory and Practice. The development of domain independent theory

barrington
Download Presentation

Content Matters: Towards a Symbiosis of General and Domain-Specific Theories of Learning and Instruction

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Content Matters: Towards a Symbiosis of General and Domain-Specific Theories of Learning and Instruction Paul Cobb Vanderbilt University Nashville, USA

  2. Top Down Relation Between Theory and Practice • The development of domain independent theory • The derivation of general principles for design from the theory • The translation of the principles into concrete designs in specific domains • The assessment of the concrete designs to test whether they work as anticipated

  3. Bottom Up Relation: Methodological Orientation • Classroom design experiments • Responsible for a group of students’ learning • Teacher a member of the research team • From several weeks to a year or more in duration

  4. Bottom Up Relation: Methodological Orientation • Sequences of instructional activities and associated tools • Analyses of the process of the students’ mathematical learning and the specific means by which that learning is supported and organized

  5. Bottom Up Relation: Methodological Orientation • Means of support • Instructional tasks • Tools and resources • Organization of classroom activities • Classroom norms and discourse

  6. Design Research Cycle

  7. Instructional Design • Delineation of significant mathematical ideas within a domain -- problematize the content • Conjectured learning route or trajectory for students’ learning that culminates with these significant mathematical ideas • Conjectured means of organizing learning along the envisioned trajectory

  8. Instructional Design • The conjectured learning route depends on the means by which learning is supported and organized • Attempting to “engineer” students’ development of particular forms of mathematical reasoning

  9. Resources and Constraints for Design • General theories of learning and instruction • Students’ prior knowledge • Historical development of ideas and processes in the particular mathematical domain

  10. Resources and Constraints for Design • Analyses of sequences of cognitive levels and of student misconceptions • Do not problematize the domain • Document the consequences of typical school instruction • Analyses of the process of students’ learning in innovative instructional environments

  11. Overall Purpose • Not to demonstrate that the instructional design works • Not even to test whether the design works • Test, revise, and improve the conjectures inherent in the design

  12. Domain Specific Instructional Theory • Substantiated learning trajectory that culminates with significant mathematical ideas • Demonstrated means of supporting and organizing learning along that trajectory

  13. Design Heuristics • Abstract design heuristics from a number of domain specific instructional theories • Empirically grounded in a range concrete designs • Feeds forward to guide the development of other domain specific instructional theories • Open to continual refinement and improvement

  14. Bottom Up Relation Between Theory and Practice • Instructional design serves as the context for the development of theory • If you want to understand something, try to change it • If you want to change something, try to understand it • Symbiotic relationship between psychology of mathematical learning and instructional design

  15. Top Down Relation Between Theory and Practice • The development of domain independent theory • The derivation of principles for design from the theory • The translation of the principles into concrete designs • The assessment of the concrete designs to test whether they work as anticipated

  16. Top Down Relation Between Theory and Practice • Rarely if ever occurs in practice • One-way chain of reasoning implied in research reports • Alive and well in the discourse of educational research

  17. Top Down Relation Between Theory and Practice • Purpose: Test whether the design works • Experimental or quasi-experimental designs • Focus is typically on learning outcomes rather than learning processes • Limited guidance for improvement of designs

  18. Top Down Relation Between Theory and Practice • Ill-suited for testing and revising theory • Weak feedback loop from design to theory • Failure of concrete designs rarely leads to revision of general theory • Attempt to demonstrate practical relevance of theory

  19. Top Down Relation Between Theory and Practice • Assessed with respect to my concerns and interests as a mathematics educator • Development of general theories typically motivated by different sets of concerns and interests • Cognitive psychology • Developmental psychology • Sociocultural theory

  20. Top Down Relation Between Theory and Practice • Emerged historically in response to different types of problems • Theories as conceptual tools developed for particular purposes • Ask different types of questions, attempt to gain insight into different types of phenomena, produce different forms of knowledge

  21. Top Down Relation Between Theory and Practice • For what purposes are particular types of theories useful? • For who are particular types of theories useful? • General, domain independent theories are potentially useful to educational administrators

  22. Design Research Cycle

  23. Classroom-Based Analyses • Classrooms are complex and messy • Need interpretive frameworks that enable us to see pattern and order in seemingly ill-structured events • Key criterion: Should result in analyses that feed back to inform the improvement of instructional designs

  24. Interpretive Frameworks

  25. Social Norms • Students are obliged to: • Explain and justify their solutions • Make sense of others’ explanations • Indicate understanding and non-understanding • Ask clarifying questions or challenge alternatives when differences in interpretations have become apparent

  26. Sociomathematical Norms • What counts as: • A different mathematical solution • A sophisticated mathematical solution • An efficient mathematical solution • An acceptable mathematical explanation

  27. Classroom Mathematical Practices • Specific to particular mathematical ideas • Counting by one versus conceptualizing numbers as composed of tens and ones • How mathematical content is actually realized in the classroom

  28. Analyses and Design • Accounts of the process of students’ mathematical learning that are tied to the means by which that learning was supported and organized • Develop testable conjectures about how the design might be improved

  29. Classroom Learning Environment • Organization of classroom activities • Instructional tasks • Tools and resources • Classroom norms and discourse • Social norms • Sociomathematical norms • Classroom mathematical practices

  30. Classroom Learning Environment • Instructional tasks as realized in the classroom are influenced by: • Organization of classroom activities • Tools and resources • Norms and discourse

  31. Classroom Activity System • The teacher and students jointly constitute the classroom learning environment in the course of their ongoing interactions • Instructional tasks • Tools and resources • Organization of classroom activities • Norms and discourse

  32. Top Down Perspective • Classroom learning environment composed of independent variables • Exists independently of teacher’s and students’ collective activity • Under the researcher’s control -- manipulable from the outside the classroom • Types of tasks • Types of tools • Social arrangements • Instructional strategies

  33. Top Down Perspective • Investigate into how variations in the learning environment affect aggregate student performance • Design x works better or worse than design y • Conditions under which x works better or worse than y • Types of students for whom x works better or worse than y

  34. Top Down Perspective • Limited value in improving designs • Teachers and domain specialists • Useful to educational administrators • Limited expertise in domain-specific processes of learning and teaching • Have to make a defend decisions that impact a large number of classrooms

  35. Top Down Perspective • New cadre of educational administrators • Separate professional concerns from those of teachers • Both maintain a distance from and manage classroom instructional processes • Learning environment composed of manipulable variables

  36. Top Down Perspective • Scientific research as the basis for the rationalization of educational systems • Folk beliefs about science rather than the reality of scientific practices • Quantification, experimentation, search for universal principles and laws

  37. Domain Specific and General Theories • Hypothesis generating and hypothesis testing • Produce different forms of knowledge • Contrasting characterizations of learning environments • Contrasting characterizations of students • Useful to different groups of people

  38. Division of Labor • Domain independent theories and experimental studies • Administrative perspective • Contribute to public policy discourse about education

  39. Division of Labor • Domain specific theories and design experiments • Classroom perspective • Contribute to instructional design and teaching

More Related