Talk:Educational ideas

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Revision as of 22:25, 28 August 2006 by CuriousGeorge (talk | contribs) ('Constructionist' vs. 'Constructivist'?)
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Books Wikibooks (20+ languages)


Stories ICDL library of stories

Gruppo Logos children's books (20+ languages)


Primary source material Wikisource (20+ languages)

Project Gutenberg


Dictionaries Dicologos dictionary (250+ languages)

Dicologos children's dictionary (148 languages)

Wiktionary (100+ languages)


Other/Mixed The Internet Archive repository

K-12 Open Tech collection

Motherland Nigeria's KidZone

This content sidebar was on the main page and is totally off topic. I put it here in case there is some other place where it might belong. I suggest that the only appropriate page on this wiki is one that has a simple list of annotated URLs to point to POSSIBLE source material. The fact that a digitized book exists does not mean that it is useful for education or that it is useful for kids to read.

This page is for educational ideas.

'Constructionist' vs. 'Constructivist'?

It's my understanding that Papert – the coiner of the theory and term 'constructionism' – now works on the OLPC project. While I'm currently reading Edith Ackermann's paper contrasting the differences between Piaget's constructivist theory and Papert's constructionist theory (I found it through a link at Wikipedia), I'd be very curious to hear Papert himself explain the differences.

I also note that Montessori's educational ideas are noted – have you heard of the Reggio Emilia approach? I taught preschool in a North American Reggio-inspired setting for two years, which perhaps explains my fascination with the OLPC plan. It might be interesting to examine the idea of every student having one computer in terms of a Reggio Emilia-inspired classroom...

CuriousGeorge 22:25, 28 August 2006 (EDT)