Knowledge
Building.
It involves creative,
sustained work with ideas.
Knowledge
building classrooms are knowledge creating. This means that they are
idea-centred, with students taking collective cognitive responsibility for
advancing shared knowledge. Students learn to create knowledge by actually
doing it.
Knowledge
building teachers/ students collaborate and engage in sustained
explanation-seeking discourse, they design, perform, and refine experiments,
they test hypotheses and build onto each other’s ideas, and they create
artifacts and engage in design work of all kinds. Students’ knowledge building
work is sustained by collective curiosity, opportunities to chart the course of
their own learning, opportunistic collaboration and the excitement and
motivation generated when students are exploring authentic, real world problems
that they actually care about.
In knowledge
creating classrooms, diverse ideas,
collaboration among members and a
collective
commitment to advancing shared goals is essential for
success.
In
order to help the students build the knowledge, tasks need to be challenging,
authentic, and multidisciplinary.
Collaboration
around authentic tasks often takes place with peers and mentors within school
as well as with family members and others in the real world outside of school.
Collaboration
is a very powerful in knowledge building , take for instance in the CCTI course
through collaboration we have been able
to build knowledge by contributing to the google drive documents, wiki and
groups which has widened our personal knowledge.

Thanks Julius. That image summarizes the knowledge building aspect very well and it also shows the need for collaboration in knowledge building
ReplyDeleteThanks Margaret.
ReplyDeleteNice image Julius,indeed KB cant occur without collaboration.
ReplyDelete