What is the unique idea in Connectivism? « Connectivism - 0 views
www.connectivism.ca/?p=116
connectivism Siemens #evomlit #evomlit11 #CCK11 multiliteracies mooc web2.0 education technology

-
what is the unique idea in connectivism?
-
what is the new idea in constructivism? That people construct their own knowledge? Or the social, situated nature of learning? Or that knowledge is not something that exists outside of a knower? (i.e. there is no “there” out there)
- ...30 more annotations...
-
What is new with constructivism today is that these principles are being (have been) coupled with existing calls for educational reform
-
6. We also find a compatible view of connectivism in the work of new media theorists such as McLuhan
-
7. We also find support for connectivism in the more nebulous theories of complextiy and systems-based thinking
-
Networks are prominent in all aspects of society, not just education. This prominence is partly due to the recognizable metaphor of the internet…but networks have always existed. As Barabasi states, networks are everywhere. We just need an eye for them.
-
1. Connectivism is the application of network principles to define both knowledge and the process of learning.
-
2. Connectivism addresses the principles of learning at numerous levels – biological/neural, conceptual, and social/external
-
3. Connectivism focuses on the inclusion of technology as part of our distribution of cognition and knowledge.
-
4. Context. While other theories pay partial attention to context, connectivism recognizes the fluid nature of knowledge and connections based on context
-
These elements are prominent in constructivism, to a lessor extent cognitivism, and not at all in behaviourism.
-
But in connectivism, we argue that the rapid flow and abundance of information raises these elements to critical importance.
-
Connectivism finds its roots in the climate of abundance, rapid change, diverse information sources and perspectives, and the critical need to find a way to filter and make sense of the chaos.