Discovery learning
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free encyclopedia
Discovery learning is a technique of inquiry-based instruction and is considered a constructivist based approach to education. It is supported
by the work of learning theorists and psychologists Jean Piaget, Jerome Bruner, and Seymour Papert. Although this form of instruction has great
popularity, there is some debate in the literature concerning its efficacy
(Mayer, 2004).
Jerome Bruner is often credited with originating discovery learning
in the 1960s, but his ideas are very similar to those of earlier writers (e.g. John Dewey). Bruner argues that "Practice in
discovering for oneself teaches one to acquire information in a way that makes
that information more readily viable in problem solving" (Bruner, 1961,
p. 26). This philosophy later became the discovery learning movement of
the 1960s. The mantra of this philosophical movement suggests that we should
'learn by doing'. In 1991, The Grauer School, a private secondary school in Encinitas,
California, was founded with the motto, "Learn by Discovery", and
integrated a series of world-wide expeditions into their program for high
school graduation. (See Expeditionary Learning.)
The
label of discovery learning can cover a variety of instructional techniques.
According to a meta-analytic review conducted by Alfieri, Brooks, Aldrich, and
Tenenbaum (2011), a discovery learning task can range from implicit pattern
detection, to the elicitation of explanations and working through manuals to
conducting simulations. Discovery learning can occur whenever the student is
not provided with an exact answer but rather the materials in order to find the
answer themselves.
Discovery
learning takes place in problem solving situations where the learner draws on
his own experience and prior knowledge and is a method of instruction through
which students interact with their environment by exploring and manipulating
objects, wrestling with questions and controversies, or performing experiments.
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