In which major American city was Bruner born in 1915?
New York City
This learning theory states that students actively build knowledge rather than passively receive it.
Constructivism
Bruner believed students learn best through exploration, inquiry, and problem-solving rather than passive listening. What is this approach called?
Discovery Learning
Which theorist influenced Bruner’s ideas about guided learning and social interaction?
Lev Vygotsky
A teacher has students use base-ten blocks before introducing written numbers and equations. Which instructional idea is being applied?
Hands-on learning / enactive learning
Bruner earned his doctoral degree and later became a professor at which Ivy League university?
Harvard
According to constructivist theory, new knowledge is built upon what?
Prior knowledge and experiences
Which of the following is NOT one of Bruner's Modes of Representation? Enactive – Iconic – Cognitive –Symbolic
Cognitive
What does ZPD stand for?
Zone of Proximal Development
Students first look at pictures and models before explaining a concept in their own words. Which mode of representation is being used?
Iconic representation
Bruner taught at which major university in England?
University of Oxford
A classroom where students explore, ask questions, and solve problems collaboratively reflects which key principle of constructivist learning?
Learning through exploration and active engagement (accept: inquiry, problem-solving, active learning)
According to Bruner, why is the teacher’s role critical in discovery learning?
Because the teacher must facilitate thinking, guide inquiry, and structure experiences rather than simply provide information.
In Vygotsky’s Zone of Proximal Development, learning occurs most effectively when students are working with what kind of support?
Guided support (teacher or peer collaboration)
A teacher introduces the concept of government in 1st grade, revisits it in 3rd grade with more detail, and explores political systems in 5th grade. Which of Bruner’s contributions does this reflect?
Spiral Curriculum
Which historical event/conflict did Bruner serve in the military during?
World War II
In a constructivist classroom, how does the teacher’s role differ from a traditional lecture-based classroom?
The teacher acts as a facilitator or guide rather than simply delivering information.
Bruner argued that any subject can be taught at any age if it is structured appropriately and revisited over time. What is this idea called?
Spiral Curriculum
Both Bruner and Piaget are considered constructivists. What core belief do they share about learning?
That learners actively build or construct knowledge.
Instead of giving students answers, a teacher asks questions and guides students as they figure out solutions together. What is the teacher’s role in this classroom?
Facilitator of learning (guided discovery)
Bruner was part of a major shift in psychology that moved away from behaviorism and toward what central focus?
The study of thinking and cognitive processes (cognition and learning)
Why would memorization alone not fully align with constructivist theory?
Because constructivism emphasizes understanding through active engagement and meaning-making, not passive recall of facts.
Bruner’s three modes of representation (enactive, iconic, symbolic) explain what about the learning process?
The different ways learners understand and demonstrate knowledge.
How does Bruner’s view of cognitive development differ from Piaget’s?
Piaget proposed fixed developmental stages, while Bruner focused on modes of representation and believed concepts could be taught at any age if structured appropriately.
A lesson starts with exploration and group discussion before any formal explanation is given. Which learning approach does this best represent?
Discovery Learning