Constructivist SIG Newsletter November 2015 PDF

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First, we want to congratulate those who had their papers accepted for the 2016 AERA Annual Conference that will be held in Washington, DC. We will highlight the 2016 AERA  papers and th e Constructiv ist SIG relate d sessions in our spring news letter edi tion next March.  For the fall edition of the Constructivist SIG Newsletter, we look back on the 2015 AERA Annual Conference, which was in Chicago, IL. The Constructivis t SIG hosted engaging sessions and paper presentatio ns related to constructivis t teaching and learning  practices. Thank you to th e Session C hairs and Discussants fo r your service in helping to lead these sessions. Those serving as Session Chairs were Dr. Shelia Rae Goodwin and Dr. Ashwini Tiwari. Those serving as Discussants were Dr. Jeffrey Kaplan and Dr. Tingting Xu. The 2015 AERA Annual Conference paper sessions were well -attended and engaging. The discussants helped to facilitate thought-  provoking d iscussions duri ng each paper se ssion. The SIG business meeting at the 2015 AERA Annual Conference provided an excellent opportunity to become fam iliar with the scholarship of our membership. Tawnya Lubbes, our newsletter editor and professor at Eastern Oregon University, presented her recently  published book chapter ca lled, “From Do as We Sa y to Do as We [Digita lly] Do: Mode ling the Implementation of the Common Core.” Additionally, Dr. Jacqueline Grennon Brooks, Professor at Hofstra University, shared an interactiv e presentation from her book,   Big Science for Growing Minds: Constructiv ist Classroom Thinkers. During the SIG business meeting, we also honored the 2015 Outstanding Conferenc e  Submission Award winning paper, which was submitted by Mikko Tiilikainen, Juuso  Karjalainen, and Jukka Husu from the University of Turku i n Finland. Below, we highlight  part of Tiilika inen et a l.’s paper entit led, "Primary School Te achers' I nstructional P ractices Related to Constructivist Approach to Teaching."  We encourage all our SIG members to attend the SIG business meeting in Washington, DC, at the 2016 meeting. More details about that SIG meeting will be posted in the spring newsletter.  A Year in Rev iew    T    H    E    C    O    N    S    T    R    U    C    T    I    V    I    S    T    T    H    E    O    R    Y  ,           S             C        &             C          C       S       G       N     e     w     s      l     e      t     e     r  Volume 3, Issue 1 November 2015

Transcript of Constructivist SIG Newsletter November 2015 PDF

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First, we want to congratulate those who had their papers accepted for the 2016 AERA

Annual Conference that will be held in Washington, DC. We will highlight the 2016 AERA

 papers and the Constructivist SIG related sessions in our spring newsletter edition nextMarch. 

For the fall edition of the Constructivist SIG Newsletter, we look back on the 2015 AERAAnnual Conference, which was in Chicago, IL. The Constructivist SIG hosted 

engaging sessions and paper presentations related to constructivist teaching and learning practices. Thank you to the Session Chairs and Discussants for your service in helping to

lead these sessions. Those serving as Session Chairs were Dr. Shelia Rae Goodwin and Dr.Ashwini Tiwari. Those serving as Discussants were Dr. Jeffrey Kaplan and Dr. TingtingXu.

The 2015 AERA Annual Conference paper sessions were well-attended and engaging. The

discussants helped to facilitate thought- provoking discussions during each paper session.

The SIG business meeting at the 2015 AERA Annual Conference provided an excellent

opportunity to become familiar with the scholarship of our membership. Tawnya Lubbes,our newsletter editor and professor at Eastern Oregon University, presented her recently

 published book chapter called, “From Do as We Say to Do as We [Digitally] Do: Modelingthe Implementation of the Common Core.” Additionally, Dr. Jacqueline Grennon Brooks,Professor at Hofstra University, shared an interactive presentation from her book,  Big

Science for Growing Minds: Constructivist Classroom Thinkers.

During the SIG business meeting, we also honored the 2015 Outstanding Conference 

Submission Award winning paper, which was submitted by Mikko Tiilikainen, Juuso 

Karjalainen,and Jukka Husu from the University of Turku in Finland. Below, we highlight part of Tiilikainen et al.’s paper entitled, "Primary School Teachers' Instructional PracticesRelated to Constructivist Approach to Teaching." 

We encourage all our SIG members to attend the SIG business meeting in Washington, DC,

at the 2016 meeting. More details about that SIG meeting will be posted in the spring

newsletter.

 A Year in Review

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 Volume 3, Issue 1

November 2015

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• The full name of the nominee; 

• The institutional affiliation of the nominee;  

• A biographical statement for the nominee, which can be up to 250 words.  

Page 2 THE CONSTRUCTIVIST THEORY, RESEARCH & PRACTICE SIG

NEWSLETTER

Highlight Your Work

In each edition of this newsletter, we would like to highlight the work of our members. If you have recently had a

 professional accomplishment that you would like to share with the membership, please e-mail Tawnya Lubbes([email protected]) with the details. Published books, book chapters, journal articles, and substantive works in

 progress will be highlighted. We can also share short articles written expressly for this newsletter and not publishedelsewhere. 

2015 Outstanding Conference Submission Award Winning Paper

Primary School Teachers' Instructional Practices Related to

Constructivist Approach to Teaching. 

By Mikko Tiilikainen, Juuso Karjalainen, & Jukka Husu 

Abstract.The theory- practice gap is a widely recognized challenge in teachereducation and is related also to constructivism- based instruction in the

classrooms. Also, constructivist approaches have been subjected to multifacetedscholarly critiques, revealing the problematic sides of the predominant stance.

This study presents in depth case analyses of five primary school teachers’instructional activities related to constructivism. Constructivist teaching is

understood as an organization of core instructional practices where knowledgecreation, student agency, situational learning tasks and problem-orientation areemphasized. The results of deductive video-analysis of the teaching sequencessuggest that the accommodation of student agency differentiates the constructivist practices between the teachers. Appearances of the constructivist

dimensions are described, helping teachers and researchers to further scrutinizeconstructivist teaching. 

Constructivist-associated teaching practices have become popular in current educational discussion and

recommendations (Savasci & Berlin, 2012; Uzuntiryaki, Kirbulut & Bektas, 2010; Feyzioglu, 2012). However,constructivism has also been a target for criticisms, mainly from three viewpoints: 1) Philosophy of teaching (see e.g.Fox, 2001; Nola, 2003; Phillips, 1995; Matthews, 2002; Carr, 2004; Puolimatka 1999), 2) theory of teaching (see e.g.Terhart, 2003; Biesta, 2011, 2012; Kansanen 1999; Kivelä & Siljander 2012), and 3) reviews concerning research oneffects of teaching (see e.g. Kirschner, Sweller & Clark 2006; Mayer 2004; Matthews 2003) have challenged the

 prevailing constructivist stance. Richardson (2003) and Biesta (2011) agree that i) constructivism is a learningtheory,ii) there's no clear picture of what constructivist teaching actually is, and iii) even if there were, we do not have aclarified view of what effective constructivist teaching is like. 

Also, teacher education and professional development programs have been criticized for leaving a “gap” betweentheory (i.e. research-generated knowledge) and practice (see e.g. Korthagen, Loughran, & Russell, 2006). As a result,teachers often experience difficulties in relating theories of teaching and learning to their practical work in classrooms(Grossman, Hammerness, & McDonald, 2009). Thus, with the aim of bridging this gap research needs to advance

teachers’ continuous deliberation on practice in order to extract also possible ‘constructivist patterns’ from the teaching activities and thus develop their personal theories of action. Against this background, this study seeks touncover the ways constructivism appears in primary school teachers' teaching practices. In specific, the research taskof this study can be addressed as follows:

1) What manners of constructivist-associated teaching can be recognized in participating teachers' classroom practice? 

2) How do characteristics of constructivist-associated teaching appear in participating teachers' classroom practice? 

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• The full name of the nominee; 

• The institutional affiliation of the nominee;  

• A biographical statement for the nominee, which can be up to 250 words.  

Page 3

 Announcements

Become an Officer

SAVE THE DATE:

THE CONSTRUCTIVIST THEORY, RESEARCH & PRACTICE SIG

The Constructivist SIG seeks to build strong relationships with international scholars whose work and research aligns with

constructivist practices. Our Constructivist SIG website (link: http://constructsig.wikispaces.com/Home) continues to be visited

 by scholars all around the world! We encourage all SIG members to invite your colleagues, especially your international 

colleagues, to join our Constructivist SIG. Violeta Vainer, the Program Chair for our SIG, is helping to organize an international

collaboration of constructivist oriented scholars. We will share more details about this collaboration in the spring newsletter. In

the meantime, please keep visiting the Constructivist SIG website for SIG related announcements, job postings, and calls for

conference presentations and paper proposals.

Here are some announcements that are currently on the SIG Website: 

UNC Charlotte Seeks an Assistant Professor of Elementary Science Education The Department of Reading and Elementary Education at The University of North Carolina at Charlotte invites applications for

a full-time, tenure-eligible Assistant Professor position in Elementary Science Education beginning August 15, 2016.  

Jean Piaget Society Annual Conference 2016 - Call for Papers 

The thematic focus of the 2016 meeting is on the connections between children and the physical environments in which they

develop. Please consider submitting a proposal by December 15, 2015. 

We are currently accepting nominations for SIG officers. We have the following openings: Treasurer and Program

Chair (descriptions of these positions can be found below).  Nominations should be sent via email to Erik Jon Byker,

SIG Chair, at [email protected] ,by November 13, 2015.  Nominations must include the following:

1) The full name of the nominee

2) The institutional affiliation of the nominee 3) A biographical statement for the nominee, which can be up to 250 words.

Treasurer. The Treasurer shall be responsible for managing and reporting on the financial accounts of the SIG and the safe

keeping of all financial documents of the SIG. 

Program Chair. The Program Chair shall be responsible for determining sessions, reviewers, discussants and chairs for the annu-

al meeting along with sending acceptance and rejection notices to authors of submitted proposals. In addition, the Program Chair

will act as Chair in the event of the absence of the Chair.