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instructional_design:cognitive_apprenticeship [2011/08/22 12:45]
jpetrovic [Read more]
instructional_design:cognitive_apprenticeship [2011/08/22 13:09]
jpetrovic [What is the practical meaning of cognitive apprenticeship?]
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   * "//the central issue in learning is **becoming a practitioner**,​ **not learning about practice**.//"​(([[http://​www.sciencedirect.com/​science?​_ob=MImg&​_imagekey=B6VFY-3VGH6NM-8-3&​_cdi=6023&​_user=3875467&​_pii=S0959802298000113&​_origin=gateway&​_coverDate=10%2F31%2F1998&​_sk=999919995&​view=c&​wchp=dGLzVtb-zSkzS&​md5=54f492ed91e398595ce3ec7d063fa80b&​ie=/​sdarticle.pdf|Brown,​ J. S. Internet technology in support of the concept of //​communities-of-practice//:​ The case of Xerox. Accounting, Management and Information Technology, 8, 227โ€“236. 1998.]]))   * "//the central issue in learning is **becoming a practitioner**,​ **not learning about practice**.//"​(([[http://​www.sciencedirect.com/​science?​_ob=MImg&​_imagekey=B6VFY-3VGH6NM-8-3&​_cdi=6023&​_user=3875467&​_pii=S0959802298000113&​_origin=gateway&​_coverDate=10%2F31%2F1998&​_sk=999919995&​view=c&​wchp=dGLzVtb-zSkzS&​md5=54f492ed91e398595ce3ec7d063fa80b&​ie=/​sdarticle.pdf|Brown,​ J. S. Internet technology in support of the concept of //​communities-of-practice//:​ The case of Xerox. Accounting, Management and Information Technology, 8, 227โ€“236. 1998.]]))
  
-Learning is here, just as in [[learning_theories:​situated learning|situated learning theory]] defined as naturally tied to activity, context, and culture which form the learning context and occurs through //​legitimate peripheral participation//​ (a process in which a novice joins a [[learning_theories:​communities of practice]] on periphery and as he learns moves toward full participation).+Learning is here, just as in [[learning_theories:​situated learning|situated learning theory]] defined as naturally tied to activity, context, and culture which form the learning context and occurs through //​legitimate peripheral participation//​ (a process in which a novice joins a [[learning_theories:​communities of practice]] on periphery and as he learns moves toward full participation).(([[http://​www.aect.org/​edtech/​ed1/​31.pdf|Dennen,​ V. P. Cognitive apprenticeship in educational practice: Research on scaffolding,​ modeling, mentoring, and coaching as instructional strategies. Handbook of research on educational communications and technology: 813โ€“828. 2004.]]))
  
 Cognitive apprenticeship focuses on four dimensions that constitute any learning environment(([[http://​llk.media.mit.edu/​courses/​readings/​Collins.pdf|Collins,​ Allan. Cognitive Apprenticeship. In The Cambridge Handbook of the Learning Sciences, 2006.]]))(([[http://​www.sciencedirect.com/​science?​_ob=ArticleURL&​_udi=B6VDC-444DY90-6&​_user=3875467&​_coverDate=11%2F30%2F2001&​_rdoc=1&​_fmt=high&​_orig=gateway&​_origin=gateway&​_sort=d&​_docanchor=&​view=c&​_searchStrId=1719161483&​_rerunOrigin=google&​_acct=C000050661&​_version=1&​_urlVersion=0&​_userid=3875467&​md5=ee1ed08bf82f52c9ca64f2a8d61bca66&​searchtype=a|Enkenberg,​ Jorma. Instructional design and emerging teaching models in higher education. Computers in Human Behavior 17, no. 5-6: 495-506. September 2001.]])): Cognitive apprenticeship focuses on four dimensions that constitute any learning environment(([[http://​llk.media.mit.edu/​courses/​readings/​Collins.pdf|Collins,​ Allan. Cognitive Apprenticeship. In The Cambridge Handbook of the Learning Sciences, 2006.]]))(([[http://​www.sciencedirect.com/​science?​_ob=ArticleURL&​_udi=B6VDC-444DY90-6&​_user=3875467&​_coverDate=11%2F30%2F2001&​_rdoc=1&​_fmt=high&​_orig=gateway&​_origin=gateway&​_sort=d&​_docanchor=&​view=c&​_searchStrId=1719161483&​_rerunOrigin=google&​_acct=C000050661&​_version=1&​_urlVersion=0&​_userid=3875467&​md5=ee1ed08bf82f52c9ca64f2a8d61bca66&​searchtype=a|Enkenberg,​ Jorma. Instructional design and emerging teaching models in higher education. Computers in Human Behavior 17, no. 5-6: 495-506. September 2001.]])):
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   * "//it is up to the teacher to identify ways in which cognitive apprenticeship can work in his or her own domain of teaching. //"​(([[http://​northwestern.academia.edu/​AllanCollins/​Papers/​229120/​Cognitive_Apprenticeship_Making_Thinking_Visible|Collins,​ Allan, John Seely Brown, and Ann Holum. Cognitive Apprenticeship:​ Making Thinking Visible. American Educator 15, no. 3: 6-11, 1991.]]))   * "//it is up to the teacher to identify ways in which cognitive apprenticeship can work in his or her own domain of teaching. //"​(([[http://​northwestern.academia.edu/​AllanCollins/​Papers/​229120/​Cognitive_Apprenticeship_Making_Thinking_Visible|Collins,​ Allan, John Seely Brown, and Ann Holum. Cognitive Apprenticeship:​ Making Thinking Visible. American Educator 15, no. 3: 6-11, 1991.]]))
  
-Still, the difference between decontextualized and contextualized learning, characteristic for cognitive apprenticeship in educational process can be explained on following example((Borrowed from Heeter, C. Situated Learning for designers: Social, Cognitive and Situative Framework. 2005.)):+Still, the difference between decontextualized and contextualized learning, characteristic for cognitive apprenticeship(([[http://​math.unipa.it/​~grim/​QRDM_Dimakos-Nikoloudakis-Ferentinos_20_2010.pdf|Dimakos,​ G., E. Nikoloudakis,​ S. Ferentinos, and E. Choustoulakis. The role of examples in Cognitive Apprenticeship. Mediterranean Journal for Research in Mathematics Education, 2010.]])) ​in educational process can be explained on following example((Borrowed from Heeter, C. Situated Learning for designers: Social, Cognitive and Situative Framework. 2005.)):
  
  
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 |For example, give students a task to through the Photoshop reference manual, tool by tool (or specify a set of tools), in alphabetical order, learning how each tool (line, paint, bucket, select, etc.) works including all possible optional settings. ​ |For example, give students a task such as, create a logo for a company. To accomplish it, they should look up and learn only a few particular tools they realize they may need to use to accomplish the design. Demonstrate the task (modeling), explain why each of the sub-tasks is required (explanation),​ guide students during their task performance (coaching, scaffolding),​ ask them to reflect and articulate how they solved the task, and require from them to explore similar problems (exploration). ​ | |For example, give students a task to through the Photoshop reference manual, tool by tool (or specify a set of tools), in alphabetical order, learning how each tool (line, paint, bucket, select, etc.) works including all possible optional settings. ​ |For example, give students a task such as, create a logo for a company. To accomplish it, they should look up and learn only a few particular tools they realize they may need to use to accomplish the design. Demonstrate the task (modeling), explain why each of the sub-tasks is required (explanation),​ guide students during their task performance (coaching, scaffolding),​ ask them to reflect and articulate how they solved the task, and require from them to explore similar problems (exploration). ​ |
  
 +Also, the possibilities of usage of computers in cognitive apprenticeship have been addressed(([[http://​math.unipa.it/​~grim/​QRDM_Dimakos-Nikoloudakis-Ferentinos_20_2010.pdf|Dimakos,​ G., E. Nikoloudakis,​ S. Ferentinos, and E. Choustoulakis. The role of examples in Cognitive Apprenticeship. Mediterranean Journal for Research in Mathematics Education, 2010.]])).
  
 ===== Criticisms ===== ===== Criticisms =====
instructional_design/cognitive_apprenticeship.txt ยท Last modified: 2023/06/19 18:03 (external edit)