The implementation of authentic activities for learning: a case study

The situated cognition theory of learning advocates that students should engage in the same types of activities in which expert practitioners in the various disciplines engage. Situated cognition promotes the use of authentic activities for learning and understanding. This paper reports the findings...

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Main Author: Baccarini, David
Format: Conference Paper
Published: Murdoch University 2004
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/10786
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author Baccarini, David
author_facet Baccarini, David
author_sort Baccarini, David
building Curtin Institutional Repository
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description The situated cognition theory of learning advocates that students should engage in the same types of activities in which expert practitioners in the various disciplines engage. Situated cognition promotes the use of authentic activities for learning and understanding. This paper reports the findings of a case study for implementing and evaluating authentic activities for learning in an undergraduate construction degree program. A key finding is that authentic activities should be introduced early and developed and applied progressively throughout the program in order to maximise effective learning outcomes. Students appreciated the value of learning through authentic activities, particularly the integration of different disciplines and areas of knowledge. However, students initially struggled with the ambiguity of problems to be solved and the range of possible acceptable solutions.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-107862017-01-30T11:20:59Z The implementation of authentic activities for learning: a case study Baccarini, David situated cognition authentic activities construction management The situated cognition theory of learning advocates that students should engage in the same types of activities in which expert practitioners in the various disciplines engage. Situated cognition promotes the use of authentic activities for learning and understanding. This paper reports the findings of a case study for implementing and evaluating authentic activities for learning in an undergraduate construction degree program. A key finding is that authentic activities should be introduced early and developed and applied progressively throughout the program in order to maximise effective learning outcomes. Students appreciated the value of learning through authentic activities, particularly the integration of different disciplines and areas of knowledge. However, students initially struggled with the ambiguity of problems to be solved and the range of possible acceptable solutions. 2004 Conference Paper http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/10786 Murdoch University fulltext
spellingShingle situated cognition
authentic activities
construction management
Baccarini, David
The implementation of authentic activities for learning: a case study
title The implementation of authentic activities for learning: a case study
title_full The implementation of authentic activities for learning: a case study
title_fullStr The implementation of authentic activities for learning: a case study
title_full_unstemmed The implementation of authentic activities for learning: a case study
title_short The implementation of authentic activities for learning: a case study
title_sort implementation of authentic activities for learning: a case study
topic situated cognition
authentic activities
construction management
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/10786