Definitions
Constructivist
Theories
Real World Applications
Examples
The Influence of Technology
100

As students start to understand an idea, the teacher begins to slowly withdraw support

What is Fading?

100

How individuals use information, resources, and help others to build understanding

What is Cognitive Constructivism?

100

"Plants need soil to grow. Humans eat food to grow. Therefore, plants eat soil." This is an example of this theory

What is Cognitive Constructivism?

100

Zoom, TedEd, and Kahoot are all examples of these

What are Virtual Learning Environments?

100

Virtual worlds, educational games, and multimedia programs are all examples of these

What are technology rich environments?

200

Using the student’s interests to engage with learning

What is Motivational Scaffolding?

200

Views learning as increasing our abilities to participate with others in activities that are meaningful in the culture

What is Social Constructivism?

200

"Improving your algebra allows you to participate more in the math club activities" is an example of this

What is Enculturation?

200

Use of first language, visuals, connecting to background knowledge, and reading aloud are all examples of this teaching technique

What is Scaffolding?

200

Canvas and Blackboard are examples of this type of Virtual Learning Environment

What are Learning Management Systems?

300

A relationship in which a less-experienced learner acquires knowledge and skills under the guidance of an expert

What is Cognitive Apprenticeship?

300

Each of us constructs meaning (knowledge) from our own experiences, but what we have no way of understanding the knowledge constructed by others or even whether our knowledge is “correct”

What is Radical Constructivism?

300

Teaching phonetics, then teaching new skills such as full words and sentences, while still circling back to phonetics is an example of this teaching method

What is Spiral Curriculum?

300

Linguistic, Visual-Spatial, and Interpersonal are all examples of this

What are Learning Styles?

300

Tools that connect students to one another when students are virtual or learning in PLEs.

What are Personal Learning Networks?

400

A situation in which learning in the real world is not like learning in school

What is situated learning?

400

Psychologist headed the field of cognitive constructivism

Who is Piaget?

400
An example of this would be that students will work in pairs to ask each other questions about the material after a lesson

What is reciprocal learning?

400

"Teachers teach some values above others" is a drawback of this theory

What is Radical Constructivism?

400

A skill pertaining to one's ability to “decode”, evaluate, find, and communicate through technology

What is Digital Literacy?

500

Students are confronted with a problem that launches their inquiry. They collaborate to find solutions and learn valuable information and skills in the process

What is problem-based learning?

500

Psychologist headed the field of social constructivism

Who is Vygotsky?

500

"Watering the yard makes the grass grow. Therefore, rain makes the grass grow too," is an example of this type of knowledge

What is transferable knowledge?

500

Education, psychology, computer science, philosophy, sociology, and neuroscience are all examples of this discipline

What are the Learning Sciences?

500

78% of teachers have used this method of teaching at least once and 45% have used this method 1-2 times a week 

What is the flipped classroom?