Publication | Closed Access
Conceptualizing Debates in Learning and Educational Research: Toward a Complex Systems Conceptual Framework of Learning
108
Citations
27
References
2016
Year
Inquiry-based LearningEducational PsychologyEducationCognitionComplex SystemsLearning-by-doingEducation ResearchSocial SciencesLearning DesignCognitive ConstructionLearning PsychologySocial Learning EnvironmentSocial LearningLearning EnvironmentHuman LearningCognitive ScienceLearning SciencesFeedback InteractionsEducational ContextLearning AnalyticsLearning BehaviourLearning MethodologyLearning TheoryConceptual FrameworkLearning Systems DesignFoundations Of EducationEducational Theory
This article proposes a conceptual framework of learning based on perspectives and methodologies being employed in the study of complex physical and social systems to inform educational research. We argue that the contexts in which learning occurs are complex systems with elements or agents at different levels—including neuronal, cognitive, intrapersonal, interpersonal, cultural—in which there are feedback interactions within and across levels of the systems so that collective properties arise (i.e., emerge) from the behaviors of the parts, often with properties that are not individually exhibited by those parts. We analyze the long-running cognitive versus situative learning debate and propose that a complex systems conceptual framework of learning (CSCFL) provides a principled way to achieve a theoretical rapprochement. We conclude with a consideration of more general implications of the CSCFL for educational research.
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